你听说过“指尖陀螺”吗?这是目前英国校园操场上最受学生喜爱的游戏,而且越来越多的成年人也开始加入其中。指尖陀螺是否又是一个短暂的热潮?
School playground crazes come and go but the latest collectable toy is proving popular with children and adults alike. My kids have gone mad for the platsic spinning disc called a fidget spinner and I have to admit, I've become a little
addicted1 too – but why?
Fidget spinners have taken the world by storm. They were originally designed to help kids with conditions like autism deal with stress but they have become a popular toy and they're
helping2 reduce my stress levels too – when there's something on my mind I just spin!
So what's the big deal about these three-pronged pieces of rotating plastic? Well, there are many different designs and colours to collect and then there's the challenge of spinning them, getting the speed up, balancing it on the end of your finger. On video-sharing websites, vloggers have
amassed3 millions of views from performing tricks with their fidget spinners. Richard Gottlieb,
founder4 of US-based consultancy Global Toy Experts, says adults are increasingly turning to fidget toys because, he says, with all the bad news in the world, "it is a good time to be selling something that allows an individual to fidget off some stress – particularly at a time when smoking is looked down on."
For most school children, they've become the latest 'must-have' accessory, although some schools have banned them, saying some are poorly made and can be a
distraction5 for pupils. However, one teacher, Ms Timmons, says that they can aid learning among some children. She says "these fidget toys are one way of allowing them to fidget without the disruption of the tapping pencils or the tapping of feet. It's a much less disruptive way to channel their energies into something else while the teaching is going on."
Fidget spinners join a long and
distinguished6 list of other childhood favourites now living in the teacher's top drawer. It wasn't long ago when our homes and school playgrounds were littered with
loom7 bands as they suddenly became must-have accessories. Billions of them were sold and then made into various forms of rubbery jewellery. One teacher, Guy Tarrant, has
confiscated8 numerous items from children over the years. He says: "There's so much stuff, so many
fads9 and stages. I worked as a supply teacher in over 150 schools so I've probably seen it all."
It's probably fair to say fidget spinners won't always be flavour of the month. Eventually they'll be confined to the
bin10, to be replaced by a new equally
addictive11 and annoying craze.