Particle.news
Download on the App Store

Teachers Clamp Down on Viral 'Six Seven' Meme Disrupting Lessons

An ambiguous TikTok chant from rapper Skrilla’s track has become an in‑group signal, prompting classroom crackdowns.

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.