The Star Malaysia

Fidget toy craze spins teachers into a tizzy

Gadget meant to calm nerves, but schools find it too distractin­g

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People do want to fidget. There is so much to worry about in the world right now, people need a way to work out stress.

Richard Gottlieb

NEW YORK: It was supposed to calm nerves, relieve stress and improve concentrat­ion, but a new anti-fidget toy spreading fast through US and European schools is angering teachers on both sides of the Atlantic.

Just months after the “fidget spinner” first whirled its way into the hands of antsy youngsters, some schools have already banned it – prompting a debate about the difficulti­es children experience concentrat­ing.

“The fidget spinners came out of nowhere and then it seemed every other kid had them,” said Meredith Daly, a sixth grade teacher at a public school outside Phoenix, Arizona.

“The kids would say, ‘Oh it helps me calm down.’ I did not really know what to think at first.”

Sold for just a few dollars, the spinning top-like gadget divided into two or three branches has proved a surprise hit this spring, first in the United States and then across Europe after its release on the continent last month.

The spinners have the advantage of being silent, Daly said – a relief to many grown-ups after months of “bottle flip”, a popular game that involves spinning a bottle of water until it lands upright.

But it quickly became clear that with “the fidget spinner, you need to keep it going, they want to look at it spinning around ... it is too distractin­g if you are trying to learn something new”, she said.

Like many American teachers who have vented their irritation on Twitter, Daly tolerates them only at parents’ express request or when the need arises, as is sometimes the case for children with attention problems, hyperactiv­ity or certain forms of autism. Other schools in the United States, France and England have banned them, even during recess, much to the annoyance of children like Tom Wuesteberg.

“It would help (to have them in school) ... if I don’t want to do my work anymore, I take my fidget, do a little spin and then get back to work,” the eight-year-old said.

Noelle Cullimore said spinning helps her 10-year-old son, who has attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder, to relax.

“He spins it at the bus stop or in the car, it really does keep him occupied, and for the most part it has been good for him.”

Adults also like to use spinners as a way “to burn out stress”, said Richard Gottlieb, chief executive officer of Global Toy Expert.

“People do want to fidget. There is so much to worry about in the world right now, people need a way to work out stress.”

As annoying as it may be, many teachers recognise that a growing number of children need to play with something in their hands to concentrat­e better and are now more tolerant of students clicking pens or tapping their feet.

 ?? — AFP ?? Kids will be kids: Tom (left) and his brother Louis playing with fidget spinners in a park in New York.
— AFP Kids will be kids: Tom (left) and his brother Louis playing with fidget spinners in a park in New York.

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