At the basis of any course in acoustics is the fundamental idea of the simple harmonic oscillator. The term alone is confusing to students with little to no background in physics or math. For courses in musical acoustics at the undergraduate level, this topic is often minimized due to the lack of preparation. This, in turn, results in a more superficial approach to the advanced topics. While deriving the mathematical treatment from first principles is out of reach to these students, approaching the math itself as a language where they are building a description of a simple mass and spring system in their new, yet somewhat familiar, language can be accomplished through pictures, graphs and hands on activities. Students begin to build a vocabulary of “words” that can be strung together in “sentences” that tell the story of how the motion of a mass on a spring is produced. Emphasis is placed on the analogous comparison of physical properties by relating variables such as amplitude and frequency to that of volume and pitch. This model can then be used as a building block to the understanding of how sound is produced, propagated and perceived.