Don’t close this browser tab!

This Mystery is being downloaded to your device so you can play it at home without an Internet connection.

Keep this tab open once it's downloaded in order to play the Mystery.

If you experience problems, please talk to your teacher.

0% Cancel
Seeing Sound

Seeing Sound

Scroll for prep

Can you think of a time you've ever seen sound? Usually, people think of hearing sound, not seeing it.

For a long time, people have been trying to see sound in different ways. On the next slide, you'll see how a music composer, Nigel Stanford, has made lots of ways to see sound!

This is a pretty cool video with so many ways to see sound waves! Today, we'll focus on three parts of the video.

You’re going to make observations and think of what might explain what’s going on in these devices. Don’t worry if you aren’t totally sure yet, you’ll learn new concepts throughout the unit that will help you make sense of what you’re seeing.

Get a See-Think-Wonder chart to record your ideas.

In today's activity, you'll make predictions about how each device makes sound waves visible.

It’s okay if you aren't sure of the right answer yet. After each Mystery, you'll have an opportunity to change or add to your drawing.

We'll walk you through it, step by step.

It's time to do some investigations! In this unit, you'll explore how sound and music work. This will help you figure out how to explain the Metal Plates, Speaker Dish, and Ruben's Tube. At the end of the unit, you will use everything you've learned to design your own device that makes sound visible!

Have fun, and stay curious!

You've completed the Unit Starter!

Be sure to keep each student's Seeing Sound worksheet accessible. They will revise it after each Mystery.

Teach Mystery 1 next: How far can a whisper travel?

Image & Video Credits

Mystery Science respects the intellectual property rights of the owners of visual assets. We make every effort to use images and videos under appropriate licenses from the owner or by reaching out to the owner to get explicit permission. If you are the owner of a visual and believe we are using it without permission, please contact us—we will reply promptly and make things right.

Other
Cymatics: Science Vs. Music - Nigel Stanford by Image used under permisson from Nigel Stanford through Youtube.com

Featured Reviews

“This was amazing! My students love the video so much they request to watch it several times a day! I love how this connects all the mysteries in the unit together.”
“This is a great unit starter. This is exactly how I like to start my units!!! It sparks interest and really gets them thinking.”
“Awesome! The video is amazing and the kids loved it. Great job of getting the kids to think and wonder!”
“The students LOVED the music- very engaging!”

Activity Prep

Print Prep
Note: This lesson is part of this unit’s Anchor Layer. If you have the Anchor Layer turned on, we recommend teaching all lessons in the remainder of this unit in order.

The anchor phenomenon for this unit is a music video by composer Nigel Stanford, that showcases a series of devices that make sound waves visible. Students generate observations and questions about the phenomenon and create an initial conceptual model to explain what is happening.
Preview activity

Extend this lesson

 
Waves Anchor Phenomenon: Seeing Sound

How did the lesson go?
Terrible OK Good Great Terrific!

How can we improve it?

If you'd like our team to reply to you, please Contact Support instead.

Thanks for your feedback! If you have a question or need help, please contact us. Please consider sharing your review:

Sorry the lesson didn’t go well. We read every single review in an effort to improve our Mysteries.

Thanks for letting us know. We’ll wait to ask you for feedback until after you've actually taught it.

Thanks for the feedback! We read every single review in an effort to improve our Mysteries.

Is the video not playing properly?

Please follow these steps:

  1. Very rarely a video will fail to completely load in your browser. Try to reload this page to see if that fixes the problem.
  2. If reloading does not help, try our other video player .
  3. If the video still fails to play, open this video in a new tab

Close

How can we help you?

💡For purchasing info, see our Pricing Page

This episode is locked

This lesson is not included in your limited access.

View pricing

This episode is locked

Your membership is expired. The archive of past Mini Lessons is not included in your limited access.

View pricing