Pencil Eraser Dust Tray Tag
Purpose
Use this prompt-only skill when a user wants a small printable tag for controlling eraser crumbs and pencil dust at a study desk, homework table, drafting spot, tutoring station, art desk, or shared writing area. The deliverable is a printable tray tag with sweep times, a cleanup cue, and a simple discard mark.
This skill is for basic tidiness only. It does not make medical, allergy, respiratory, chemical, sanitation, or safety claims.
Safety Boundary
Keep all guidance limited to visible desk cleanup and simple routine design. Do not describe eraser dust as toxic, hazardous, contaminated, infectious, or medically important. Do not claim the routine prevents illness, allergies, asthma, skin irritation, or other health outcomes.
Do not provide chemical cleaning advice, disinfectant instructions, dust exposure analysis, electronics repair advice, school safety policy, or hazardous material handling. If the user asks about health symptoms, chemical cleaners, or unusual dust, recommend appropriate qualified guidance and offer to create a plain tidiness tag instead.
Avoid instructions that spread debris, such as blowing crumbs across the desk. Use gentle collection language: sweep, tap, lift, empty, wipe if already appropriate for the desk surface, and reset.
Required Inputs
Ask for only practical setup details:
- Desk or station location.
- Main user group: child, student, artist, teacher, office worker, or shared table.
- Tray type: small dish, paper cup, sticky note zone, folded paper, shallow bin, or existing pencil box.
- Current problem: crumbs on paper, dust near keyboard, marks on desk, mixed pencil shavings, forgotten cleanup, or shared-space mess.
- Cleanup timing: after homework, after sketching, before lunch, end of class, end of work block, or daily reset.
- Tag size preference: small strip, desk tent, mini label, index-card size, or full-page cut sheet.
- Wording tone: kid-friendly, classroom, office, neutral, or art-studio.
Do not ask for private personal details.
Workflow
- Name the tray zone. Give the dust tray or collection spot a short visible label.
- Pick the sweep cue. Tie cleanup to a natural moment, such as after erasing, after one page, before closing the notebook, or at desk reset.
- Choose the tag format. Select a strip, folded tent, mini card, or label based on the available space.
- Write the tag copy. Use short physical-action language that fits on a printable tag.
- Add status marks. Include tiny check boxes for swept, tray emptied, and desk reset.
- Add a weekly check. Include one small reminder to replace the tag if bent, dirty, or ignored.
- Keep the boundary. Exclude health claims, cleaner instructions, and private data.
Output Format
Return a printable eraser dust tray tag with these sections:
-
Tag Snapshot
- Location
- Tray type
- Main user
- Cleanup timing
- Tag size
-
Printable Tag Text
- Short title
- One-line sweep cue
- Tray placement line
- Discard or empty line
- Reset line
-
Tiny Check Row
- Swept
- Tray emptied
- Desk clear
- Ready for next page
-
Placement Notes
- Where the tray sits
- Where the tag attaches or stands
- What should not block the tray
- How to keep the cue visible
-
Weekly Reset
- Check whether the tray is still in place
- Replace bent or hard-to-read tag
- Empty the tray
- Clear mixed pencil shavings or paper scraps
-
Boundary Line
- Basic desk tidiness only
- No health, chemical, or electronics claims
Example Response Skeleton
Pencil Eraser Dust Tray Tag
Tag Snapshot
- Location: [desk or table]
- Tray: [tray type]
- Cleanup timing: [moment]
- Tag size: [format]
Printable Tag Text
- Title: Eraser Dust Tray
- Sweep cue: After erasing, sweep crumbs here.
- Empty cue: Empty at desk reset.
- Reset cue: Paper clear, tray clear, pencil ready.
Check Row [ ] Swept [ ] Tray emptied [ ] Desk clear [ ] Ready
Placement Notes Keep the tray beside the writing hand but away from the page edge, cup, keyboard, or food area.
Quality Bar
A strong output is printable, compact, and specific enough to place next to a real desk tray. It should make the cleanup action visible without turning a small tidiness routine into a health, chemical, or safety claim.