Overview
- The phrase, lifted from Skrilla’s “Doot Doot (6 7),” spread through TikTok sports edits and now saturates schools, with TikTok showing about 1.1 million related videos.
- Educators in the U.S., U.K. and Australia report frequent interruptions when students shout “six seven,” often with a juggling hand gesture.
- Teachers are imposing consequences such as 67‑word essays that can escalate to 670 words, loss of behavior points, recess time penalties, and repeated lines like “I will not say ‘6-7’ in class.”
- Some staff are repurposing the call‑and‑response to regain focus, while others advise avoiding triggers like counting aloud past six and seven.
- Experts and reporters note the term has no fixed meaning and functions as a youth in‑joke; psychologists say it fosters belonging even as mainstream attention, including TV satire, signals a likely peak.
 
  
  
 