Across schools, a strange new trend is driving teachers up the wall — and it’s happening in classrooms from the moment the bell rings. Students have started randomly chanting “6–7!” during lessons, especially during math class, and educators say it has gotten so disruptive that some are threatening to remove kids from the room if it continues.
It all started on social media, where a viral joke turned two innocent numbers into a chaotic inside joke. The phrase “6–7” spread like wildfire on TikTok, with thousands of students repeating it without even fully understanding the meaning — they only knew it made their friends laugh and their teachers miserable.
So what does “6–7” actually mean?
According to the online trend, it’s meant to mimic the punchline of the classic joke “Why is 6 afraid of 7? Because 7 ate (8) 9.” But the viral version twists it into a chaotic chant totally out of context. Kids shout “6–7!” as a way to interrupt, annoy, or purposely derail the lesson, knowing it will make half the classroom giggle. It’s become a sort of secret signal — a way for students to “break the seriousness” of math class with one quick, loud outburst.
Teachers say it’s gotten out of control. Some report entire groups chanting it every time a number appears on the board. Others say students now try to work it into every question, every assignment, and even tests — turning what used to be quiet classrooms into arenas of nonstop noise.
“It ruins the flow of the lesson,” one frustrated teacher said. “You can’t get through a single equation without someone yelling it. It’s become a competition of who can say it louder.”
Schools are now sending reminders about classroom conduct, and a handful of teachers have warned students they’ll be kicked out if the chanting continues.
The trend might seem silly, harmless, and childish — which it is — but for educators trying to teach, it’s become a daily headache. And like most viral jokes, it’ll probably fade faster than it arrived… but until then, “6–7!” is the sound echoing through classrooms everywhere.