USA TODAY US Edition

Interest in fidget gizmos spinning out

- Mackenzie Ryan

Fidget spinners took Iowa schools by storm this spring. The twirling, hand-held toys at times exasperate­d teachers and distracted students.

But by the time school started this fall, interest had dissipated.

“It seems to already be a bit of a passing fad,” said Des Moines Schools spokesman Phil Roeder. “Sort of the ‘Pokémon Go’ of 2017.” The use of fidget spinners skyrockete­d in spring, prompting some schools to confiscate the gizmos or even ban them from classrooms or school buildings. Their popularity was buoyed by tricks students learned online and showed off to friends.

But how schools approached the bans were complicate­d, and at times controvers­ial. Some saw fidget spinners as a way to help students with anxiety, attention or autism-spectrum disorders.

Teachers also were divided. Some handed them out or sold them to raise money for classroom projects, believing in the benefits of fidgeting. First-grade teacher William Morris was among the fidget spinner defenders.

For one student, who Morris said was always fiddling with his sweatpants strings and gazing down, the spinner helped occupy his hands and keep his focus on the lesson.

Morris sought permission to allow spinners in his classroom after Brubaker Elementary discourage­d students from bringing them to school.

“To some families, it was a supportive tool,” Morris said. “They were crushed because they felt it was helping their children.”

Yet the distractio­n was very real in some classrooms. “Everyone had one,” said Mason Meyer, a Ceder Falls native who teaches music across the border in Jackson, Minn.

At one point, roughly half of the teens in his choir classes had fidget spinners.

They’d twirl — and inevitably fumble, drop or break them, leaving small metal parts flying across the room.

“When everyone began using them, it devalued the need” of students who benefited from fidgeting, Meyer said.

Since school started this fall, few if any students are bringing the gizmos to class, educators said. Meyer has yet to see one.

“On a personal level, I’m not surprised,” he said. “On a profession­al level, it’s somewhat of a relief.”

 ?? GANNETT FILE ?? Fidget spinners exploded in popularity this spring, but Iowa teachers report interest is waning this fall.
GANNETT FILE Fidget spinners exploded in popularity this spring, but Iowa teachers report interest is waning this fall.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States