Lesson Planet
Search educational resources
  • Sign In Try It Free
  • AI Teacher Tools
    • Discover Resources Search reviewed educational resources by keyword, subject, grade, type, and more
    • Curriculum Manager (My Content) Manage saved and uploaded resources and folders To Access the Curriculum Manager Sign In or Join Now
    • Browse Resource Directory Browse educational resources by subject and topic
    • Curriculum Calendar Explore curriculum resources by date
    • Lesson Planning Articles Timely and inspiring teaching ideas that you can apply in your classroom
    • Our Story
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Testimonials
    • Contact Us
  • Pricing
  • School Access
    • Your school or district can sign up for Lesson Planet — with no cost to teachers
      Learn More
  • Sign In
  • Try It Free
Tone of Voice and Volume Control ActivityTone of Voice and Volume Control Activity
Publisher
Do2Learn
Resource Details
Curator Rating
Educator Rating
Not yet Rated
Grade
K - 12th
Subjects
English Language Arts
6 more...
Resource Type
Activities & Projects
Audience
For Teacher Use
Instructional Strategies
Direct Instruction
1 more...
Usage Permissions
Fine Print: Educational Use
Activity

Tone of Voice and Volume Control

Curated and Reviewed by Lesson Planet
This Tone of Voice and Volume Control activity also includes:
  • Thermometer
  • Voice and Volume Control Handout
  • Join to access all included materials

What level of voice is most appropriate for the classroom? Develop volume control in your learners with ASD with an activity that lets them know when they are using appropriate and inappropriate voice level.

66 Views 48 Downloads
CCSS: Adaptable

Concepts

autism, communication, voice, conversation skills

Additional Tags

classroom support

Instructional Ideas

  • Create a large class sized version of the thermometer that is used to manage whole-class noise level

Classroom Considerations

  • Best used with individuals with autism, but applicable to any classroom setting

Pros

  • Offers ways to talk to three levels of learners with autism: child, adolescent, and adult
  • Comes with two worksheets for reference

Cons

  • None

Common Core

SL.K.1.a SL.1.1.a SL.2.1.a SL.3.1.a SL.4.1.a SL.5.1.a SL.6.1.a SL.7.1.a SL.8.1.a SL.9-10.1.a SL.11-12.1.a

View 124,682 other resources for K - 12th Grade English Language Arts

© 1999-2026 Learning Explorer, Inc.
Teacher Lesson Plans, Worksheets and Resources

Sign up for the Lesson Planet Monthly Newsletter

Open Educational Resources (OER)

  • Health
  • Language Arts
  • Languages
  • Math
  • Physical Education
  • Science
  • Social Studies
  • Special Education
  • Visual and Performing Arts
View All Lesson Plans

Discover Resources

  • Our Review Process
  • How it Works
  • How to Search
  • Create a Collection

Manage Curriculum

  • Edit a Collection
  • Assign to Students
  • Manage My Content
Contact Us Site Map Privacy Policy Terms of Use