The teaching profession requires a certain degree of patience. Particularly when students discover a new trend to latch onto and repeat at every given opportunity. The latest so-called “brain rot” phrase to flood the classroom: “6-7.”
If you don’t have any Gen Alphas in your life and have no idea what I’m talking about, count yourself lucky. Some teachers have taken to social media to share their exasperation with the trend that has recently overrun classrooms, with schools outright banning it in some instances.
“Say ‘6-7’ one more time,” one teacher posted on TikTok, pretending to address a student in her class. “We’re gonna call your mom in about 6-7 minutes, let her know how you interrupt my class 6-7 times a day, and then maybe she’ll take your phone away for 6-7 days.”
Teachers are going to extreme lengths to avoid saying the numbers—on the pages of textbooks or in answers to math equations—for fear of triggering a commotion in the classroom. Meanwhile, some have adopted an “if you can’t beat ’em, join em” approach, turning the trend into a classroom management strategy or a learning tool.
Others have taken a simpler line of attack. “I choose 6 and 7 and 67 every time I need random numbers right now, which also seems to be killing the joke for the kids—but I think it’s very funny,” one teacher responded to a Reddit thread on r/Teachers. “I did it with a class earlier this week, and they didn’t do it again,” another one suggested. “Nothing like a teacher doing a trend to make something uncool.”
Like much of Generation Alpha slang, the “6-7” trend originated on TikTok, spawning over a million related videos, before making its way into schools, basketball courts, and sports interviews.
So what does “6-7” actually mean? To many parents, confusion.
The numbers can be traced back to a song called “Doot Doot,” released by hip-hop artist Skrilla in late 2024, in which he raps: “6-7, I just bipped right on the highway (bip, bip).” From there, a video of a boy yelling “6-7” into the camera at a basketball game went viral; thus was born a new meme.
It’s important to note that the “6-7” meme is pronounced “six, seven”—not “sixty-seven” or “six to seven,” as some may assume, having only seen it in writing. It’s often accompanied by the hand gesture you would use to tell someone that you’re weighing two options (both palms facing up, hands moving slightly up and down).
Searches for “Gen Alpha translator” have surged 790% in the past year, making it the fastest-growing “translator” query, Jenny Lee, lead data analyst at Google Trends, told Axios. Meanwhile, “6-7” has emerged as the most popular search for both “how to use [slang]” and “why do middle schools say” in 2025.