Preschool teachers’ perspective on how high noise levels at preschool affect children’s behavior

Early-age exposure to noise may have long-term health implications of which we have little knowledge of today. Age-specific hearing, learning inadequate coping strategies, and alterations in biological stress regulatory responses could play a role in the long-term health impacts. In Sweden about half a million children in the age between 1–5 years attend preschool. The noise exposure at preschools is intermittent and unpredictable and levels reach up to 84 dB LAeq (time indoors) with maximum levels of 118 dB LAF, mostly due to child activity. To increase the overall understanding of the possible implications of preschool noise environments for children, this paper describes children’s behavioral and emotional reactions to and coping with their everyday sound environment from a teachers perspective. A postal questionnaire study performed in 2013–2014 with answers from 3,986 preschool teachers provided the data. Content analysis was combined with quantitative analysis. Eighty-two percent of the personnel considered that children’s behavior was affected rather or very much by preschool noise. The most prevalent behaviors were categorized into: be heard, be distracted, show negative internal emotions, crowd, avoid, withdraw, be exhausted, and learning. The quantitative analyses confirmed an association between the perceived loudness and noise annoyance at preschool and affirmative reporting on noise affecting the children´s behavior. Age of the personnel, with the youngest age group reporting noise related behavior less often, and age distribution of the class, with 1–5 years old seeming less affected by noise, were also indicated, while pedagogic orientation was not a significant factor. Future studies should address the long-term health effects of these behaviors.

[1]  Nancy L Kondracki,et al.  Content analysis: review of methods and their applications in nutrition education. , 2002, Journal of nutrition education and behavior.

[2]  I. Samuelsson,et al.  A Perspective of Group Size on Children’s Conditions for Wellbeing, Learning and Development in Preschool , 2019 .

[3]  M. Wadsworth Development of Maladaptive Coping: A Functional Adaptation to Chronic, Uncontrollable Stress. , 2015, Child development perspectives.

[4]  R. Job Noise sensitivity as a factor influencing human reaction to noise. , 1999, Noise & health.

[5]  Klaus Krippendorff,et al.  Content Analysis: An Introduction to Its Methodology , 1980 .

[6]  L. Dellve,et al.  Preschool Children's Experience and Understanding of Their Soundscape , 2013 .

[7]  G. Evans,et al.  Child development and the physical environment. , 2006, Annual review of psychology.

[8]  Katie Creed Household Chaos and Emergent Literacy Development in Young Children , 2014 .

[9]  Staffan Hygge,et al.  Noise and cognitive performance in children and adults , 2007 .

[10]  Janina Fels,et al.  From Children to Adults: How Binaural Cues and Ear Canal Impedances Grow , 2008 .

[11]  Kerstin Persson Waye,et al.  Validation of a questionnaire measuring preschool children's reactions to and coping with noise in a repeated measurement design , 2013, BMJ Open.

[12]  B. Lundman,et al.  Qualitative content analysis in nursing research: concepts, procedures and measures to achieve trustworthiness. , 2004, Nurse education today.

[13]  A H MCCALLUM,et al.  NOISE AND ITS EFFECTS. , 1965, British medical journal.

[14]  Roger Persson,et al.  A study of classroom acoustics and school teachers’ noise exposure, voice load and speaking time during teaching, and the effects on vocal and mental fatigue development , 2014, International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health.

[15]  Sofie Fredriksson Hearing-related symptoms among women - Occurrence and risk in relation to occupational noise and stressful working conditions , 2018 .

[16]  Wolfgang Babisch,et al.  PINCHE's policy recommendations on noise: How to prevent noise from adversely affecting children , 2006, Acta paediatrica (Oslo, Norway : 1992). Supplement.

[17]  S. Stansfeld,et al.  Aircraft and road traffic noise exposure and children's mental health , 2009 .