Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

New Tik Tok challenge has teachers on edge

- By Rafael Olmeda Rafael Olmeda can be reached at rolmeda@sunsentine­l.com or 954356-4457. Follow him on Twitter @ rolmeda.

Broward schoolteac­hers are bracing for the latest online “Tik Tok challenge,” though some officials think it might be more rumor than reality.

Fresh on the heels of September’s viral challenge encouragin­g students to steal items or vandalize school bathrooms, the Broward Teacher’s Union sent a note to its members countywide this week warning of October’s follow-up: “Slap a teacher.”

“TikTok challenges ... have already cost school districts a lot of money and resulted in student arrests, but they are about to get worse,” Broward Teachers Union Anna Fusco said in a letter addressed to members this week. “Keep an eye out for students who appear to be running toward you or a colleague or for a student with a camera or cell phone readying to take video.”

Viral dares are increasing­ly common, and sometimes the hype surroundin­g a trend can be more widespread than the trend itself. The Tide Pod challenge of early 2018 is one example of a meme that started years earlier as a joke but became serious when a handful of teenagers actually started to try it.

Perhaps the best known dare was the Ice Bucket Challenge of 2014, which saw participan­ts raising money for research and treatment of Lou Gehrig’s Disease by posting videos of themselves dumping cold water on their heads. Celebritie­s, politician­s and athletes joined in on the craze, which raised $200 million for the cause.

But the recent Tik Tok challenges, whether they materializ­e or not, represent a threat that schools are taking seriously. Last week, South Florida school districts posted videos and emails accompanie­d by robocalls encouragin­g parents to talk to their children about responsibl­e use of social media, and warning of legal consequenc­es for those who take up the “slap a teacher” challenge.

“Anyone that participat­es and gets caught can be arrested and potentiall­y recommende­d for expulsion,” Coral Glades High School Principal Mark Kaplan said in an e-mail to staff obtained by the Sun Sentinel. “I will never allow this sort of behavior to go unpunished.”

Kaplan’s warning came with a caveat — “We have no corroborat­ion of whether or not this is something that will be attempted,” he wrote. “My hope is that our students are smarter than that.”

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