Quiet study area noise audit and signage adjustment
Run a short noise survey and replace or reposition signs when students report distracting sounds in the study area to reduce repeat disturbances.
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Run a short noise survey and replace or reposition signs when students report distracting sounds in the study area to reduce repeat disturbances.
Students and staff report intermittent distracting conversations and phone noises around the central study table, and existing 'Quiet' signs are faded or placed inconsistently.
Noise sources shift locations and groups move around, and the current signs are small or mounted low so it's unclear where replacements will be most visible and what wording will be noticed.
A short noise log shows decibel readings below 45 dB at key points and clear, legible 'Quiet' signs are mounted at three visible entrances.
- • A4 paper — 3 sheet
- • Removable mounting tape — 6 strip
- • Smartphone with decibel meter app — 1
- • Black marker — 1
- • Scissors — 1
- 01 Measure baseline noiseVisit four predetermined points (entrance, central table, stacks, lounge), record 60-second decibel readings at each point and note active noise sources and time.⏱ 10분
- 02 Assess signage and sightlinesCheck existing signs at each entrance and above the central table for legibility, measure mounting height, take a photo, and note locations with poor visibility.⏱ 5분
- 03 Prepare updated signsDraft concise wording ('Quiet Study Area — Please Keep Voices Low'), print or hand-write three copies on A4, and cut them to the chosen size.⏱ 8분
- 04 Install signs and documentMount the three signs at the most visible locations with removable tape, photograph placements, add entries to the noise log about locations and times, and send a brief notification to staff.⏱ 8분