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What does 6-7 mean? The viral slang term that’s spread from classrooms to take over the world

From essays to behavior points, teachers nationwide are finding creative ways to curb ‘67’ disruptions in the classroom

Erin Keller
In Ohio
Thursday 11 December 2025 11:52 GMT
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This generation’s slang is driving teachers nuts.

Educators across the country are banning the term “67,” a nonsensical expression often blurted out, especially when “six” and “seven” are mentioned together, with one person saying “six” and others responding “seven.” It also comes with an accompanying “juggling” hand gesture.

The term comes from rapper Skrilla’s song “Doot Doot (6 7)”, referencing a 6’7” basketball player, which gained popularity through viral videos and memes featuring NBA player LaMelo Ball, according to Merriam-Webster.

However, teachers report that the phrase has become a distraction in classrooms. Some educators are imposing consequences, from point deductions to essays, for students who use the term.

“I’ve been teaching for 20 years, and I’ve dealt with all sorts of slang — nothing has driven me crazier than this one,” Adria Laplander, a sixth-grade language arts teacher in Michigan, told Today.com.

Educators across the country are banning the term “67,” a nonsensical expression often blurted out, especially when “six” and “ seven ” are mentioned together, with one person saying “six” and others responding “seven.” It also comes with an accompanying “juggling” hand gesture
Educators across the country are banning the term “67,” a nonsensical expression often blurted out, especially when “six” and “ seven ” are mentioned together, with one person saying “six” and others responding “seven.” It also comes with an accompanying “juggling” hand gesture (Getty)

Laplander is so over it that she made a TikTok video explaining her form of punishment for any student who utters the word or performs the hand gesture.

“We are not saying the words, ‘67’ anymore — if you do, you have to write a 67-word essay about ... what the word ‘67’ means,” Laplander said. "If you do it again, another 67-word essay. After five times, if you’re still saying, ‘67’ in this classroom, your essay is going to bop up to 670 words.”

Laplander stated that having students write essays is a mild consequence intended to restore order in class, although some still shout “67” outside her door to provoke reactions. She argues that slang can help connect with students, but not when it disrupts learning.

Other educators have used social media platforms to share tips on how to limit classroom “67” outbursts.

“Do not count out loud in class ... I was taking attendance and I said, ‘One, two, three, four, five, six, seven’” Levi Hawk said in a video, adding that his class then erupted into “67!”

A fed-up math teacher, who goes by Miss Gemnini on TikTok, warned students that saying “67” would result in losing 67 digital points, which are rewarded for good behavior.

“My goal with this is that you build some self-control,” she told her class in the video. “It’s getting a little ridiculous.”

New Jersey fourth-grade teacher Monica Choflet says the slang “67” has become so common in her class that students shout it whenever they hear a six or a seven.

The Today show explains the ‘67’ trend. Often shouted with a ‘juggling’ gesture, the slang is a nonsensical call-and-response where one person says ‘six’ and others reply ‘seven’
The Today show explains the ‘67’ trend. Often shouted with a ‘juggling’ gesture, the slang is a nonsensical call-and-response where one person says ‘six’ and others reply ‘seven’ (Jenna & Friends/NBC)

“I could say, ‘It’s 1:16 p.m., time for class and someone says, ‘67!’” Choflet told Today.com.

To curb the disruption, she requires offenders to write “I will not say ‘67’ in class” — six times for a first offense, seven for a second, and 67 for a third.

She’s also turned the term into a playful “call and response” to refocus her students, shouting “6!” as they reply “7!”

This method has been overwhelmingly helpful, with only two students writing lines for ignoring the ban.

“They thought I was kidding but once I made them write it for homework, they said, ‘Whoa, you were serious!’” Choflet said.

As crazy as it makes her, Choflet said she does appreciate the inside joke the slang has created with her students and colleagues.

“A co-worker and I went to a Bingo fundraiser and they called out ‘G-67,’” Chofle said.. “We looked at each other and said, ‘67.’”

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    1. Comment by WorldonFire.

      The only people that have heard of this are people that watched the South Park Episode and little kids. No one else has ever heard of it and it's not taking over the world...

      • Comment by arco iris.

        This will soon be yesterday's nonsense - replaced by an equally nonsensical marker of distinction between the generations . It is all harmless stuff and as meaningful as, well, 6-7 !!

        • Comment by TruthSimp.

          Actually they know exactly what’s up. Just helping carry on the numerology spell and blasting it everywhere.

          • Comment by TruthSimp.

            Even the journalist don’t know or they are ignorant. 67 has plenty of meaning. Only truthers know. Maybe the kids are naive too.

            • Comment by Warik.

              Massive fight at the curry house!

              One man was left in a korma ....

              Dad joke no. 67

              • Comment by DedalosR.

                The verse operates as a tightly coded double‑voiced text that performs two concurrent acts: it plays the part of a gangsta flex about wealth, cars, and violent capacity while systematically stitching a gay erotic narrative beneath that surface. On the surface the language is idiomatic to street rap; references to shooters, hits, VIN swaps, Trackhawks, and brands create a coherent tableau of illegality and status. Beneath that tableau the same lexical choices, rhythmic ad‑libs, and positional verbs reconfigure as erotic scaffolding. Phallic metonyms recur consistently; onomatopoeic utterances and skittering car noises function like thrusting syllables; rear‑focused imagery and instrumental metaphors invite an analized reading; transactional verbs and swap imagery map convincingly onto partner exchange and role shifts. The numeric and endurance claims operate as hyperbolic sexual scorekeeping rather than neutral tallies when read in this key, and rapid‑speech coalescence of ad‑libs makes brief tags like six‑seven readably "sex, even". Rhetorically the piece is cunning: it preserves mainstream legibility through plausible deniability while rewarding in‑group listeners with a coherent erotic scenario that is repeatedly signaled rather than explicitly stated. As interpretation, the gay erotic reading is not a forced afterthought but a structurally supported layer whose persistence across lines makes it a defensible, even likely, facet of the song’s communicative design.

                • Comment by Ron.

                  Best way to respond is by ignoring it. Like skibbity toilet it has a very short shelf life.

                  • Comment by TeacherDT.

                    Making students write as punishment teaches them to hate writing.

                    • Comment by WaitWhat.

                      the second something becomes fashionable, it becomes uncool,

                      • Reply by A Sea Cat.

                        It’s not about being cool. It’s an entirely different phenomenon. It’s a weirdly joyful way of connecting.

                        If 16 year olds and 6 year olds are still doing it then it’s definitely surpassed cool.

                        Annoying AF though 😂

                      • Reply by saghia.

                        'a weirdly joyful way of connecting'? Explain. How does shouting out a number and waving your hands up and down connect you to something or someone?

                    • Comment by JBG.

                      Isn't the answer obvious? Grown ups need to use the slang themselves, fastest way to make it un cool!

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