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Silly Bandz Bracelet Craze: School Ban Over Distraction

Jazzy

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The Bandz are now contraband. Schools in several states, including New York, Texas, Florida and Massachusetts, have blacklisted Silly Bandz, those stretchy, colorful bracelets that are creeping up the forearms of school kids across the U.S. And starting this week, all 800-some kids at my son's elementary school in Raleigh, N.C., were commanded to leave at home their collections of rubber band–like bracelets, which retail for about $5 per pack of 24. What could possibly be so insidious about a cheap silicone bracelet?





It's a distraction, says Jill Wolborsky, a fourth-grade teacher at my son's school, who banned them from her classroom before the principal implemented a schoolwide ban. One student stole some confiscated Bandz from her desk, choosing them over the cash in her drawer. (See pictures of teens in America.)





Students fiddle with them during class and arrange swaps - trading, say, a bracelet with a mermaid for one with a dragon - when they should be concentrating on schoolwork, teachers say. Sometimes a trade goes bad - kids get buyer's remorse too - and hard feelings, maybe even scuffles, ensue.





That's what prompted Karen White, principal of Snow Rogers Elementary School in Gardendale, Ala., in October to become one of the first administrators to forbid students their Bandz. We try not to limit their freedom of expression and what they wear, but when this became a problem, I knew we had to nip it in the bud pretty quickly, says White, who has since extended an olive branch in the form of monthly Silly Bandz days. (See pictures of a public boarding school in Washington, D.C.)





Silly Bandz are the latest in a long list of kid-centric fads - in the tradition of Cabbage Patch Kids, Beanie Babies, PokÉmon cards and Crocs. BCP Imports LLC, the small business in Toledo, Ohio, that's behind the bracelets, was not prepared for the frenzy. It's increased its workforce from 20 employees to 200 in the past year and just this week added 22 phone lines to keep up with inquiries. The company sells millions of packs a month, and Robert Croak, the president, can still hardly believe it. (He took my call after hanging up with Macy's, which is interested in creating a Silly Bandz float for its storied Thanksgiving Day parade.) (Comment on this story.)





Croak got inspired about three years ago at a product show in China, where a Japanese artist had devised a rubber band cute enough to escape the trash bin. Though Silly Bandz have been out for two years, they began catching on a year ago - Alabama was an early adopter, as were New Jersey and Tennessee. They're just now gaining traction in California and Texas. (See where jewelry is fitting into green designs for 2010.)





They're getting banned because kids play with them so much, says Croak, who maintains they're the right product at the right time, a cost-conscious trinket in tough economic times that can even be a learning tool for little ones, kind of like flexible flash cards.





His company receives about 500 fan letters a week. One, signed by a 10-year-old named Logan Librett and a few of his friends in New Rochelle, N.Y., suggested a way to circumvent all the bothersome Silly Bandz restrictions: Some schools in New York have banned them, but we have ideas that might change that ... clear silly bands that teachers can't see and only glow in the dark.



Link with picture: http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20100527/us_time/08599199179700
 
Okay then. Banning may not get rid of this problem though.
 
I want some of them, I have just looked them up and they are sold in the UK!
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They remind me of colored rubber bands which are probably cheaper.
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Hm...banned in Texas...but I've never even heard of them. XD
 
Anything that causes a disruption in class and interrupts the learning experience for other children should be dealt with. ANYTHING can be a disruption though. You cant ban everything.
 
I remember seeing a pack of them. 20 Silly Bands for a $1. I personally don't get the huge hype over them and could care no less if schools opt to ban them.
 
It does say a lot about your class when a silly bracelet is more interesting then what you have to say as a teacher. Perhaps instead of trying to remove every possible distraction known to mankind, we could attempt to not bore the hell out of everyone instead. Of course that requires common sense and effort which the government knows nothing about. lol



I honestly don't see what is so great about a bracelet tbh and wouldn't care if they banned them but I don't think they were around when I was in school.
 
Another meaning for these bands is to do with sex. Apparently each colour represents a different type of sexual position eg, normal sex, anal sex, cunnilingus, fellatio, etc., etc.



If someone deliberately breaks your band then you are supposed to have the type of sex that that colour band denotes. So you are supposed to have that type of sex with the person who broke your band. The kids think it is brilliant that adults think this is just a childrens toy and don't understand the sexual connotations, but you only have to google it to find all the different colour lists and what they stand for.



To be honest, even if it were just a toy, the kids constantly bring in things which they fiddle with and which distract them and others from lessons. It is easier just to ban everything as then they have nothing to fiddle with and you also don't get kids swapping or being forced to swap their things and finally, you don't have the problems with theft.
 
I can understand the ban. They could trade them at lunch or reccess. They don't need to trade while they are supposed to be learning.
 
What are those silly bandz things? The only image that's coming to my mind are those bandz like they sometimes sell at concerts and stuff which slap around your wrist and they make kind of a snapping sound when you do so. Or is that something else all together I'm thinking of?
 
Brian Fan said:
What are those silly bandz things? The only image that's coming to my mind are those bandz like they sometimes sell at concerts and stuff which slap around your wrist and they make kind of a snapping sound when you do so. Or is that something else all together I'm thinking of?



I think you're thinking of Slap Bands. They're long and kind of ruler shaped and you slap them around your wrist and they stay? They're slap bands.
 
Rapunzel said:
Another meaning for these bands is to do with sex. Apparently each colour represents a different type of sexual position eg, normal sex, anal sex, cunnilingus, fellatio, etc., etc.



If someone deliberately breaks your band then you are supposed to have the type of sex that that colour band denotes. So you are supposed to have that type of sex with the person who broke your band. The kids think it is brilliant that adults think this is just a childrens toy and don't understand the sexual connotations, but you only have to google it to find all the different colour lists and what they stand for.



To be honest, even if it were just a toy, the kids constantly bring in things which they fiddle with and which distract them and others from lessons. It is easier just to ban everything as then they have nothing to fiddle with and you also don't get kids swapping or being forced to swap their things and finally, you don't have the problems with theft.



Holy crap. Do you have a link to your claims? I wouldn't want my nieces wearing that crap or else I will have to kick their little asses. God that is disgusting.
 
Mahogany said:
Holy crap. Do you have a link to your claims? I wouldn't want my nieces wearing that crap or else I will have to kick their little asses. God that is disgusting.



The kids call them Silly Bands or Jelly Bands, this article calls them Shag Bands, but basically they're the same thing. The kids just don't want adults to know their hidden meanings.







What do all the different shag band colors mean?



Shag bands come in all different colors. If someone snaps or breaks the Shag band then the person who snapped it has to do what the shag band means with the person who is wearing it...



e.g. if I snapped a black band (sex) with my friend I would have to have sex with them:| Basically If you snap a shag band, then you have to shag the person that was wearing it when you snapped it.



NOTE- This is a game and you should Never Ever do anything you don't want to do- Making someone perform a sexual act against their will is ILLEGAL!



There are many different meanings to the colors of Shag bands, but these are the most popular ones:



Yellow - kiss (no tongues)

black - full on sex

pink - hickey (love bite)

orange - hug

purple - tongues kiss

white - flash

red - rainbow kiss/lapdance

blue - oral

brown - toss the salad ( look it up )

green - fingering/ blow job

clear/glittery - w/e the snapper's wants

gold - guy chooses

Silver - Girl chooses

Glittery/colour - whatever the snapper wants & what the colour means.

e.g. Glittery purple - whatever the snapper wants & tongues kiss x



Black - Sex

Blue - Blow Job

Pink - French kiss

Yellow - Big Hug

Purple - Pucker

Clear - Snappers Choice

Green - Fingering

Turqoise- Flash

Glow in the Dark - Sex Toys

Glitter - Girls Choice

Indigo - Hand Job && Blow Job

Orange - Flash

White - Cuddle

red - lapdance

silver - all in a row

Multi-coloured - Marridge, sex, and baby



Black- Sex

Blue- Blow job

Pink- Flash tits or penis

Yellow- Hug, Big Hug

Purple- Kiss

Clear- Whatever the snapper wants

Green- Hand job

Brown- Toss my salad

Glow in the dark- SEX TOYS

Any glitter- Girl chooses

Silver(Gray)- OUTDOOR SEX

Light Blue- Anal

Light pink- hug and kiss

Light green- Oral sex

Gold- All of the above and (my fave) tongue in vagina

orange- virgin

Clear - W/e snapper wants



White - Make Babies

Orange/Purple - Kiss / blow job

Green - Oral/fingering

Blue - Get off/Snogging

Red - Lap dance

Pink - Hickey/Lovebite

Black - Shag/sex

Robin's egg blue - Frenchkiss



Yellow - hug

Pink - hickey

Orange - snog

Purple - kiss a partner of either sex

Red - lap dance

Green - oral sex on a girl

Clear - whatever the snapper wants

Blue - oral sex on a guy

Black - missionary sex

White - flash

Glittery Yellow - hugging and kissing

Glittery Pink - flash

Glittery Purple - French (open mouth) kiss

Glittery Blue - anal sex

Glittery Green - 69 (mutual oral sex)

Glittery Clear - feel up or touch any body part they want

Glittery red- a threesome

Glittery orange - finger a girl

Glittery black - rough sex

Glittery white - strip dance

Glittery clear - give a handjob



If you would like to add additional information or comments on Shagband colors and their meaning, Click on the 'View Discussion' button below:



black-sex pink-flash

yellow-hug

purple-kiss

clear-snapper chooses

green-hand job

glitter-girl chooses

silver-out door sex

light blue-anal

light pink-hug n kiss

green-oral sex

gold-all of them





http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_do_all_the_different_shag_band_colors_mean



images






Actually, this is a good article to read:



http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/a...ut-parents-idea-true-disturbing-meaning-.html
 
Thanks. Interesting. I was oblivious to things like this in school. I never wore those bands though. I mostly wore sports bracelets, bangles and that's about it. It either comes off as being a game that no one acts upon and is just silly, or another gateway to peer pressure. I think if a boy snapped my bracelet back then I would've decked him in the stones even if I didn't know what it meant.
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This is just another trend ban, as far as this article goes. I am fine with it because the kids aren't going to die if they can't bring tacky little bracelets to school. They will pick up on the next craze.
 
It would be cool to have one of those. shame on that school ban
 
I don't see a problem with them. They only accessories and that whole sex thing would have been made up by one of the teachers/principals to scare parents into not buying them for their kids.
 

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