The incident reportedly occurred during a game between the two high schools at Roy High on Jan. 13. Students were also destroying the soap dispensers in the bathroom, according to the statement. In Northern Kentucky, however, the school is blaming a TikTok trend. Even the "mainstream" media has started. increase at other schools, which The Tribune has reported on year after year. The Hunter parents said thats not true. School officials say that students are being encouraged to destroy the soap dispenser in school bathrooms, as well as making animal noises toward each other specifically barking. A Northern Kentucky middle school released a statement to parents alerting them to strange behaviors students were exhibiting, including dressing like dogs and barking at classmates. This smart dog can be programmed to walk, dance, blink, look around, and interact. Descubre los videos populares de students barking like dogs - TikTok We are definitely seeing it in our schools," officials with Camp Ernst Middle School wrote to parents. TikTok says it doesn't allow content that promotes or enables criminal activities and has been trying to discourage the behavior. Its a Sleeper Hit: Kentucky Derby Festivals Annual Great Bed Races Happens Tonight, Challenges To Books In Kentucky Libraries Tripled In 2022 Amid National Jump In Attempted Bans, 10 Things Under $10 To Do In Louisville This Week (5/1-5-4), accounts surfaced of kids at Meade County Schools dressing and acting like cats, a community of people who get a kick out of anthropomorphized members of the animal kingdom. Boone County school officials are cracking down after reporting students are barking and dressing like dogs at school, causing a distraction in the classroom.School officials said it's. USA TODAY reported the "devious licks" trend got its start earlier this month, according to theKnow Your Meme site, whena TikTok user posted a video of themselvesstealing disposable masks with the caption "a month into school absolutely devious lick. Camp Ernst Middle School in Burlington, Kentucky, posted on Facebook last Sunday that some of their wards are barking at each other and wearing spiked collars. One mom said her biracial son, Zaquel, was being called Z the queer; he is not part of the LGBTQ community. The videos dont include the rice comment, but three of the parents reported also hearing that multiple times from where they sat on the opposite bleachers.