Teacher turns 67 `brain rot’ into `brain thought’ in history lesson
Sadeen Mohsen – Toronto Star Staff Reporter
Just before the bell rang to end the school day, an eighthgrader turned to teacher Michael Grandsoult to ask one last crucial question: “Do you know any GenZ slang?”
This was the day Grandsoult, who’s been a teacher for 18 years, learned about “67” — an internet meme that spread widely on Instagram and TikTok to the point of being seemingly everywhere. It’s believed to be connected to rapper Skrilla’s song “Doot Doot (6 7),” from last year, likely referencing a police radio code or 67th Street in Philadelphia.
Now, Grandsoult is using the trend to teach his students at St. Maria Goretti Catholic School in Scarborough about important historical lessons, specifically in the years 1867 and 1967, through hiphop verses.
As part of Hip Hop Headucatorz, a group of educators using hiphop in the classroom, Grandsoult said he wanted to create a more enjoyable, relatable learning experience out of “nothing.” This group of 12 teachers, spread around the Greater Toronto Area, Sarnia and Halifax, formed after getting together to craft an educational song for World Teachers Day in 2019.
While it may seem an unlikely way to make a connection, Grandsoult’s students seem to be enjoying the trend’s appearance in their brightly lit classroom and some turn to each other to laugh every time those numbers are mentioned, sometimes from across the room.
“Making a lesson with their lingo, what they’re into, it builds that mutual respect,” he said. “We’re meeting them where they’re at.”
Some of the verses of the group’s “6ix7” song, focused on the year 1967, include references to celebrating 100 years of Confederation, the Jungle Book and Toronto’s first Caribana parade. It also mentions the Leafs’ most recent championship.
“Raise hands up if fan of Maple Leaf family,” the song reads. “Last year that the Budds clutched the cup of Stanley.”
He said he wanted to give meaning to a meaningless trend. “What’s supposed to be a distraction meme, noise, brain rot, we’re trying to turn it into brain thought.”
This week, students are being asked to create their “review rap” using new vocabulary in preparation for a quiz. “Instead of just making a traditional vocabulary list, they have to try to put those words into rhyme in a way that shows they understand the meaning of it.” Review raps are structured like poems with a rhyme scheme to engage students creatively and help with memorization.
Sarah Acquaviva, 13, says using the rhyme of a popular meme helps her piece together the information. For other students in the classroom, Acquaviva said it can be hard for them to “just sit there and do traditional learning.”
“It can be a bit weird because it’s like, `Oh, well, my teacher’s using our lingo,’ ” she said. “It’s really funny to listen to and it’s cool to listen to and rap about this new meme.”
Acquaviva, who is also a history fan, says her parents find the lesson vastly different from their experiences, but interesting. Her dad keeps telling her how he used to “write lines on the board.”
“You can have fun with your learning instead of just sitting there bored,” she said.
Moments after speaking with the Star, Acquaviva walked over to her friend — who had six and seven figurines — and began waving her hands up and down in opposite directions, which is how the trend’s moves are performed.
Kim Wilson, a director at the Children’s Media Lab at Toronto Metropolitan University, said Generation Alpha, those born between 2010 and 2024, have lost “incredibly important” parts of childhood development such as social connection due to the COVID19 pandemic.
This can lead to higher rates of anxiety, loneliness and a lack of academic confidence, in addition to fears of another pandemic. A 2024 report by the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health showed 38 per cent of students rated their mental health as “fair or poor” and 37 per cent reported high stress levels in Ontario.
So when social trends like “67” come along, Wilson says it alleviates some of the stress they struggle with and “gives them a break.”
“It can mean nothing but just that empowerment that age group has in doing it and feeling like it’s their special thing.”
Here is a link to the original newspaper story – https://torontostarreplica.pressreader.com/article/281487872633849
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