• expired

6-layer 7.2cm Height Puzzle Cube Children Education Learning Math Toy for Children US $0.92/AUD $1.15 @ GearBest

1060
50%OFF$1

This one is for the teachers … I bought two, will be adding this to my 'educational box'.

Max order: 2

6-layer 7.2cm Height Digital Cube Mathematics Educational Toy for Children

Main Features:
Special design: Designed 6 layers with numbers and signs as a cube for mathmatics puzzling playing.
Educational: Combine funs and education, interesting and teaching can be realized at a time.
Colorful: Many kinds of colors and cartoon images do its better to attract children to play with it.

Basic Information:
Type: Mathematics magic cube
cube size: 5.2 x 5.2 x 7.2
Shape: Consist of 6 decagons

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  • I got: The Code you entered has expired

  • always have wondered where teachers get their prizes

    • +3

      always wondered how much people were willing to pay for a child who is not related to them and spends up to a second/minute/hour/day/term/year/ or up to 13 years.

      Either way, the smarter teachers either would get this deal OR purchase something more expensive to claim on tax. Whatever the reason, this is an excellent choice for anyone with a child as its educational - maths wise. You would be surprised how excited students get with such a basic toy (at least from Year Prep-3, I taught Year 6 and 7 for 5 years, and not once did I pull out the old prize box, but I have Year 2 and its a refreshing change:) ).

      • that's awesome, good on you!

      • +1

        "purchase something more expensive to claim on tax"… And that's why you're a teacher.

        • +3

          Gifts can't be claimed on tax

        • @phantom:

          Teaching aids. Work related. Claimable.

        • +2

          @Lysander:

          "Student expenses: A deduction is not allowable for expenditure on items supplied to students for their own individual needs, gifts purchased for students, or to meet students' personal costs (paragraphs 202 to 204)."
          https://www.ato.gov.au/law/view/document?DocID=TXR/TR9514/NA…

        • +2

          @phantom: My bad. All teachers, please place this in your 'educational box'. After all its not like its a lolly contributing to obesity.

        • +3

          Woudnt it be claimable under Section 207(b) or 207(d) ?
          207
          A deduction is allowable for expenditure incurred on items or teaching aids used in the everyday duties of an employee teacher. Examples of this type of expenditure would include:

          (a)
          pens, pencils, textas/markers/highlighters, colouring pencils/pens, stamps/stamp pads, stickers, paints, stationery, posters, maps, laminating, etc.;
          (b)
          storybooks, jigsaws, games, toys used by early childhood, primary school or special education employee teachers;
          (c)
          items used in cooking or sewing classes or science experiments;
          (d)
          prizes purchased to reward achievement and encourage students;
          (e)
          entrance fees for school excursions;
          (f)
          whistles and stopwatches used by physical education employee teachers; conventional watches with a stopwatch function are not deductible (see paragraphs 226 to 230);
          (g)
          calculators/calculator batteries if the calculator is used in teaching relevant subjects such as mathematics, physics, accounting or business practices; and
          (h)
          costs of maintaining classroom or school pets.

        • +1

          @phantom:

          For their own individual needs.

          Items bought for teaching for all or in general are deductible. Some student just keeps it afterwards.

          The paragraph you quoted has so many terms open to wide interpretation that it will be fine.

          The ATO has never complained thus far in the cases of many teachers I know.

      • +2

        How does getting something more expensive and claiming it on Tax Help much? Teachers surely don’t earn enough to be paying a lot of tax as it is.

      • +5

        Just a point a lot of people don't understand.

        "Claiming on tax" only lowers one's taxable income. The person does not get the whole value spent on an item.

        Let's assume my average marginal tax is about 25.5c in the dollar and I'm earning $90k. My tax would be 0.255 x 90000 or $22950.

        If I buy $1000 worth of teaching aids, my tax is not $21950 but rather 0.255 x $89000 or $22695.

        Tax deductible items do low your tax but only be the relative amount of your average tax margin.

        So when I spend $1000 on valid teaching aids or equipment, I am only $255 better off tax wise. I still cough up $745 towards the item that is not refundable.

        • +4

          I'm no expert, so maybe I'm missing something. But if your taxable income dropped from $90k to $89k, wouldn't you be $370 better off tax wise, because any income between $87001 and $180000 is taxed at 37c for every $1? Still costs $630 though.

        • +1

          @Miss B:
          Actually I've forgotten to take into account Medicare levy so probably missed other things too, so maybe even slightly more than $370.

        • +2

          @Miss B:

          My AVERAGE marginal tax on my whole income was 25.5c in the dollar in my last three years teaching.
          I had a leased car that saved me $110 tax per fortnight. (better value than teaching aids)
          Use salary sacrifice to save the big bucks; don't rely on tax deductions.
          Get the P&C to pay for your aids and consumables.

          You need to spend a day with my accountant.
          You are right to say the saving is a little more than $255 in a thousand bucks but it's not as high as $370.

        • +1

          @IainLMTA:
          For a teacher you're awfully thick
          Salary sacrifice is essentially the same as tax deduction but paid forward rather than counted retrospectively. The saving is based on your top marginal tax rate and depending on where you are and who you work for you either get the full benefit or 50%.
          The advantage of salary sacrifice is that you can apply it to non tax deductible items I.e. Car, dining out etc
          And MissB is right your tax deduction for work related items is calculated at your top marginal rate not your average rate. Mine was 47% last year taking into account Medicare levy so my Rolex only cost me $13000 instead of a full $20k (yes I can tax deduct a watch)
          Perhaps you need to spend more than a day with your accountant and learn some basic arythmetic :)

        • +2

          @Miss B: You are correct. It would be 39 cents in a dollar including Medicare - $390 in $1,000.

        • +3

          @SteatoLegato:

          What kind of job allows the tax deduction of a watch? Train Conductor?

        • -1

          @serpserpserp:
          Anything dependant on timing and precision. In my case part of the income stream is yacht racing

        • @SteatoLegato:

          I didn't know you could actually make serious money out of yacht racing. I'd reckon you'd get all the precision out of a $500 waterproof watch you need than a 20k Rolex, but each to their own. Surely down to a 1000th of a second would be enough?

        • @SteatoLegato:
          I would like to see you how that argument would hold up in the event of an audit.

        • -1

          @Peanut money:
          get audited every year - so far no issues. But then I don't get into every little detail - that's what the accountant gets paid for…

        • -1

          @serpserpserp:
          never said the money was serious - but its a nice watch…

      • +3

        I buy the kmart mini prize things that are $2 for 6! The girls in my class absolutely love the rings. I also purchase the sticky, squishy mini animals from the toy section - 30 of the little things for $3! The kids love those too. (I have 1/2s, easy to please…you get what you get you don't get upset ;))

  • +1

    Thanks OP. Great price!

  • +1

    Thanks, picked up 2 for my class of munchkins. More education deals would be great!

  • Expensive landfill..better off learning from a 100pg textbook

    • +1

      Yeah mate, concrete maths resources - who needs em

  • Has anybody considered the similarity of these to pokie machines? That is clearly where the design comes from. Being a natural conspiracy theorist though…

  • Cheers, grabbed one

  • Thanks OP! Bought one

  • +1

    Couple of reviews mentioned very smelly plastics….. must be the childsafe organic plastic that they use to make these

    • +1

      Just give the kids a Surgical mask and latex gloves during play time

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