My first instinct would have been something like that, but on second thought, I’d start with a example of a boat moving in water and the waves it makes, maybe drawing a picture and ask them to visualize it. This is admittedly very crude and inaccurate, but gives a good overview of the phenomenon. After that I’d elaborate on the differences of surface waves vs. pressure waves, wavelength & frequency and anatomy of hearing etc.
Generally speaking (and not directed against anything anyone has said): give the explainee an intuitive framework to hang details on, don’t pour a litany of seemingly unconnected facts. Just make sure he doesn’t confuse the crude framework for the actual phenomenon.
(...And more generally: of course, the best would be to explain in a mode that is natural for the individual… for me (and, I assume, quite a few others) it’s visuality & real-world analogies.)
My first instinct would have been something like that, but on second thought, I’d start with a example of a boat moving in water and the waves it makes, maybe drawing a picture and ask them to visualize it. This is admittedly very crude and inaccurate, but gives a good overview of the phenomenon. After that I’d elaborate on the differences of surface waves vs. pressure waves, wavelength & frequency and anatomy of hearing etc.
Generally speaking (and not directed against anything anyone has said): give the explainee an intuitive framework to hang details on, don’t pour a litany of seemingly unconnected facts. Just make sure he doesn’t confuse the crude framework for the actual phenomenon.
(...And more generally: of course, the best would be to explain in a mode that is natural for the individual… for me (and, I assume, quite a few others) it’s visuality & real-world analogies.)
(And hello, everyone. First post.)