Calm Kids Resource Library: Noise-Reducing Activities & Hearing Safety
Noise-reducing activities for calmer kids.
Kids live in a loud world: classrooms, cafeterias, sports, airports, concerts, fireworks, siblings, screens, and everyday family chaos. This resource library gives parents, caregivers, teachers, and venues simple ways to help children reset, regulate, and feel more comfortable when the world gets noisy.
Calm does not always mean silent.
The goal is not to remove every sound. The goal is to help children notice noise, reduce overwhelming input when possible, and have tools they can use before they reach overload.
- Build quiet breaks into busy days.
- Offer low-noise activities before and after loud events.
- Use hearing protection when loud noise cannot be avoided.
- Create routines kids can recognize and repeat.
Some kids experience noise as more than “just loud.”
Loud or constant sound can make it harder for children to focus, rest, communicate, or self-regulate. For children with sensory sensitivities, anxiety, auditory processing challenges, or developmental differences, a noisy setting can feel especially overwhelming.
Reduce the input
When possible, lower the volume, move away from the sound source, choose quieter spaces, or use properly fitted hearing protection.
- Move away from speakers or engines.
- Choose quieter seating when available.
- Plan calm breaks during busy outings.
Regulate the body
Breathing, movement, stretching, and sensory tools can help children reset after stimulation builds up.
- Try slow belly breathing.
- Use gentle pressure, stretching, or quiet movement.
- Give kids time to decompress.
Create calm routines
Predictable quiet-time activities help children know what to do when they need a break from noise.
- Set up a quiet corner.
- Keep a calm kit ready.
- Practice before the loud moment happens.
Low-noise activities that help kids reset.
These simple ideas work at home, in classrooms, while traveling, after school, before bedtime, or as a decompression routine after loud events.
1. Balloon breathing
Ask your child to pretend their belly is a balloon. Breathe in slowly to fill it, then breathe out slowly to let the air go.
- Try 3 to 5 breaths to start.
- Use before transitions or bedtime.
- Pair with a quiet voice and slow pace.
2. Sensory bottle watching
A sealed sensory bottle gives kids something quiet and visual to focus on while glitter, beads, or liquid slowly settles.
- Keep bottles sealed tightly.
- Use during calm-down time.
- Ask kids to watch until everything settles.
3. Listening walk
Take a slow walk and ask your child to notice gentle sounds: leaves, birds, footsteps, wind, water, or distant traffic.
- Choose quieter paths when possible.
- Make it a sound scavenger hunt.
- Bring a notebook for drawing what they hear.
4. Quiet art tray
Set out paper, crayons, colored pencils, stickers, or watercolor sheets for quiet creative time without extra noise.
- Use soft background music only if helpful.
- Choose simple supplies that do not need help.
- Let kids draw how their body feels.
5. Puzzle reset
Puzzles, matching games, tangrams, sorting cards, and quiet building activities give the brain a focused job.
- Keep a “quiet puzzle” basket ready.
- Choose age-appropriate difficulty.
- Use after noisy school or events.
6. Soft story time
Use slower pacing, softer voices, cozy seating, and familiar books to help children move from high energy to calm.
- Create a low-light reading corner.
- Choose gentle or predictable stories.
- Use the same “reset book” often.
7. Kid-friendly stretching
Simple poses like child’s pose, cat-cow, tree pose, or stretching like a starfish can help kids reconnect with their body.
- Keep it playful, not perfect.
- Use animal names for poses.
- Pair movement with slow breathing.
8. Guided imagination
Invite your child to imagine a quiet beach, cloud, forest, or cozy tent. Describe the scene slowly and gently.
- Keep it short for younger kids.
- Ask what they see, hear, and feel.
- Use before bed or after loud outings.
9. Calm corner time
A quiet zone gives kids a predictable place to retreat when sound, light, crowds, or activity feel like too much.
- Add pillows, books, soft toys, and headphones.
- Do not use it as punishment.
- Teach kids to ask for the space early.
Pack quiet support before you need it.
A calm kit helps children feel prepared when noise builds up unexpectedly. Keep one in the car, stroller, classroom, backpack, diaper bag, or venue sensory area.
- Child-sized hearing protection
- Small book or coloring pad
- Crayons or colored pencils
- Fidget or sensory item
- Snack and water
- Comfort item or small soft toy
- Visual schedule or “break” card
Create a decompression plan.
Loud events are easier when children know what to expect and what they can do if they feel overwhelmed.
- Before the event, explain what sounds they may hear.
- Practice wearing earmuffs before the big day.
- Choose a meeting spot or quiet break location.
- Watch for covering ears, crying, hiding, irritability, or shutdown.
- After the event, offer quiet play, a bath, soft reading, or early bedtime.
Sometimes the best activity is reducing the noise first.
Breathing, coloring, puzzles, and quiet corners are helpful tools, but they cannot always solve a loud environment. At concerts, fireworks, sporting events, airports, parades, assemblies, and festivals, properly fitted hearing protection can help reduce sound exposure and make the experience more comfortable.
BANZ® Hear No Blare® earmuffs are designed for babies and kids, with soft cushioned cups, adjustable fits, and trusted protection for loud family moments.
Trusted links for hearing safety, sensory support, and calm routines.
Bookmark this list for parents, teachers, pediatric offices, venues, sensory rooms, family events, and community programs.
Protect Your Child’s Hearing
Parent-friendly guidance on protecting children’s hearing, reducing loud sound exposure, and using hearing protectors.
Open ResourcePreventing Noise-Induced Hearing Loss
Public health guidance on avoiding loud sounds, turning down volume, moving away from noise, and using hearing protection.
Open ResourceHearing Protectors
Information about earplugs, protective earmuffs, when to use hearing protection, and how loud sound can affect hearing.
Open ResourceTips for Teaching Kids About Noise-Induced Hearing Loss
Helpful for teachers, schools, music programs, parents, and community groups teaching children about sound and hearing safety.
Open ResourceSensory Processing Issues Explained
An overview of how some children may be overwhelmed by sensory input such as loud noises, bright lights, or uncomfortable clothing.
Open ResourceSensory Processing Issues at School
Useful for understanding how sensory needs can show up in classrooms and how sensory breaks and supports may help.
Open ResourceHow to Calm a Fussy Baby
Parent guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics’ family site, including soothing strategies for babies.
Open ResourceHearing Protection Ratings Explained
Learn more about BANZ® hearing protection ratings, testing language, and what NRR means for families shopping for children.
Open ResourceNoise-reducing activities FAQ
Are noise-reducing activities the same as hearing protection?
No. Noise-reducing activities can help children feel calmer and more regulated, but they do not replace hearing protection in loud environments. If sound levels are high, reducing exposure and using properly fitted hearing protection is important.
What are signs my child may need a quiet break?
Common signs include covering ears, crying, irritability, hiding, running away, refusing to participate, becoming unusually quiet, melting down, or saying that sounds hurt or feel too loud.
Should I make my child stay in a noisy place to “get used to it”?
For many children, support works better than forcing. Try preparing them ahead of time, offering breaks, reducing the sound where possible, and giving them tools like hearing protection, a calm kit, or a quiet space.
When should kids wear hearing protection?
Bring hearing protection to loud events such as fireworks, concerts, festivals, sporting events, airshows, races, parades, school assemblies, airports, and other places where you may need to raise your voice to be heard.
Can schools, venues, and pediatric offices share this page?
Yes. This page was created as a resource library for families, teachers, event staff, pediatric offices, sensory-friendly programs, and community groups.
Give kids tools before the noise becomes too much.
Calm activities, quiet spaces, and child-sized hearing protection can work together to help families move through loud days with more confidence.
Important note: This page is for general education and family support. It is not medical advice, therapy, diagnosis, or a substitute for guidance from a qualified healthcare professional, audiologist, occupational therapist, or mental health professional. If you are concerned about your child’s hearing, sensory processing, speech development, anxiety, behavior changes, pain, or sound tolerance, please contact a qualified professional.
External links are provided as helpful public resources. BANZ® is not responsible for the content, policies, or updates on third-party websites.