Archive for ‘Students’ Category
Organize Back-to-School Savings: Tax-Free Holidays & Discount Codes
Photo by Kelli Tungay on Unsplash
Finances are tight these days. (Let’s be real — when aren’t they?) Inflation is frustrating our bank balances, and corporations are reaping record profits, frustrating our sense of fairness and propriety. Energy costs are surging just as it’s ridiculously hot in most of North America (and elsewhere). And while gas prices have dropped 40-straight-days as of the writing of this post, it’s not like that makes it any more delightful to pay at the pump.
And now, shockingly, it’s time to start thinking about organizing for back-to-school shopping.
Depending on where you live, you’re either nodding or looking shocked; if it’s the latter, it’s because you live, like I did when I grew up in Buffalo, New York, where kids don’t go back to school until after Labor Day. So for you, talking about back-to-school in July is like putting up Christmas decorations right after Halloween. (Oy. Never mind.)
The point is, there’s something going on right about now that can help you organize your financial resources for the back-to-school period.
ORGANIZE YOUR FINANCES WITH TAX-FREE HOLIDAYS
Throughout the year, many states have tax-free holiday weekends or weeks, and they are usually clustered in these mid-summer weeks to coincide with the back-to-school season for the southern states, where students return to school in early August, rather than post-Labor Day.
These states generally allow retailers to sell clothing and footwear, school supplies, computers, and sometimes backpacks, books, and other “tangible personal property” without charging sales tax. In my state, that’s a savings of 9.25%. Combine that with various 10%-off to 40%-off sales, and that’s a great opportunity to stock up on necessities.
Seventeen states scheduled back-to-school tax-free holiday weekends or weeks in 2022. If your state is not listed below, consider clicking on the name of your nearest state to be directed to that state’s official tax-free holiday page.
Note: Alabama’s tax-free holiday period has already occurred (July 15-17, 2022, and generally starts on the third Friday in July and ends at midnight on the following Sunday); watch the Alabama Department of Revenue website for 2023’s schedule.
Arkansas (August 6-7, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing and footwear (up to $100); clothing accessories and equipment (up to $50); school and academic art supplies; scholastic instructional materials (including, but not limited to books) (no dollar limit)
Connecticut (August 21-27, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing and footwear (up to $100)
Florida (various tax-free dates — see below)
May 14-August 14, 2022: children’s books
July 25-August 7, 2022: Clothing, footwear, and accessories (up to $100); school supplies (up to $50); learning aids and jigsaw puzzles (up to $30); computers and accessories for personal/non-commercial use (up to $1500).
Note: this overlaps with a year-long tax-free Florida holiday on baby/children’s clothing, shoes, and diapers, from July 1, 2022-June 30, 2023.
Illinois (August 5-14, 2022)
Reduced tax rate to 1.25%: Clothing and school supplies (up to $125)
Iowa (August 5-6, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing and footwear (up to $100)
Maryland (August 14-20, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing & footwear (up to $100)
Mississippi (July 29-30, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing & footwear (up to $100)
Missouri (August 5-7, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing (up to $100); computers/peripherals (up to $1,500); software (up to $350); graphing calculators (up to $150); school supplies (up to $50)
New Mexico (August 5-7, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing and footwear (up to $100); desktop or laptop computers, tablets or notebooks (up to $1,000); computer peripherals/hardware (up to $500); school supplies (up to $30)
Ohio (August 5-7, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing (up to $75); school supplies (up to $20)
Oklahoma (August 5-7, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing and footwear (up to $100)
South Carolina (August 5-7, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing and shoes (no limit); school supplies (no limit); backpacks (no limit); computers, printers, peripherals, and software (no limit)
Tennessee (July 29-31, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing (up to $100); school and art supplies (up to $100); desktop, laptop, and tablet computers (up to $1,500)
Texas (August 5-7, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing and accessories; footwear; school supplies; and backpacks (each up to $100)
Virginia (August 5-7, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing, accessories, and footwear (up to $100); school supplies (up to $20)
West Virginia (August 5-8, 2022)
Tax-free: Clothing (up to $125 limit); accessories, and footwear (up to $100); school supplies (up to $20)
In most cases, retailers should abide by the discounts or tax-free status whether the purchases are made at brick & mortar stores, online, or by phone.
However, so that you don’t experience any surprises, be sure to double-check that the online/phone venues from which you order understand your state’s tax holiday regulations. (In case you’re wondering, yes, Amazon participates in state sales tax holidays as long as you purchase the products exempted during your state’s tax holiday. And no, I have no idea how Amazon’s computers work that magic. I still haven’t figured out how Kohl’s magically makes my receipt so much less than I’m always expecting!)
Tax-free holiday tips:
- The price limits above generally refer to the price-per-item cost, not your entire purchase. If the per-item limit is $100 and your entire bill for clothing comes to $250, but no one item is more than $100, you’re golden.
- Make a list of what each family member needs before you get to the store. (Check with your school to see if a grade-appropriate supply list has been posted online. If your school does not provide a list prior to the start of the school year, consider an online supply list organized by grade level.) It’s tempting to buy anything that seems like a bargain, but acquiring what you don’t need just because it’s a “deal” is the fast track to clutter.
- Set a budget for each shopping category so that you’re not tempted to go hog-wild, and consider what each of your students might need vs. what you can keep in a central home school supply area for all to share.
- Shopping with smaller children may stress you (and your kids) out, so consider trading shopping and babysitting time with a friend or split babysitter costs while you and your friend hunt for bargains together.
- Let older children participate — use it as an opportunity to practice math skills (“How much is this shirt if it’s marked as 15% off?”) and encourage them in finding good deals on high-quality products. The more responsible they are, perhaps reward them with the amount by which they came in under budget to apply toward something fun.
- Remember to keep your receipts in case you need to return something; note each retailer’s return policy. Again, this is a great opportunity to teach financial and organizing skills. Show them how you calculated your budget and checked the purchases against the bottom line. Have tweens and teens help you take note of return policy dates and file receipts pending any possible returns.
- Remember that tax-free holidays aren’t just for kids! In most cases, there’s a $100 limit on clothing and shoes for any age person. After all, a shirt a 15-year-old can wear might just as easily be worn by a 30-year-old, and there’s very little way to differentiate school supplies from office supplies. (What do you mean grownups aren’t supposed to use unicorn stickers and fuzzy troll pencil toppers?)
- I’m going to say this a second time — set a budget. And stick to it. The point of saving money is to have more of it, not to buy more of what you don’t necessarily need. Focus on needs, then surprise and delight yourself and your kids with a few wants, as well.
And as long as we’re talking about saving money, here are a few discounts of which you might want to take advantage, as long as you’re doing the back-to-school thing.
Bixbee
Nobody likes sales emails, but I have to admit it. Once I learned of Bixbee a few years ago, I became obsessed with their cool kid products, which include backbacks, lunchboxes, sleeping bags, and kids’ accessories.
Bixbee, maker of ergonomically-smart backpacks built with the anatomy of tiny humans in mind, has some products that will charm your kids (and their spines) and keep clutter at bay.
Also, if your kids’ backpacks or lunchboxes are super-cool and fun, they’re less likely to leave them on the bus, or in their gym lockers, or just lose them altogether, which means you won’t have to make duplicate purchases…which means you save money. Whoohoo!
Bixbee also has delightful luggage and duffels for ease of traveling, rain boots and T-shirts, water bottles and just a whole bunch of kid-friendly goofiness.
You didn’t ask me, but of course I have favorites, like the Sparkalicious Ruby Raspberry Butterflyer Backpack
and the Monkey Backpack and the matching Monkey Lunchbox:
Bixbee is having a back-to-school sale. Get 25% off any purchase with the code BACK2SCHOOL but hurry, because this discount code expires on Wednesday, July 27, 2022!
Bixbee is also offering free Standard Shipping (for US customers only) on all orders over $60.00 and a FREE folder and stickers with every backpack order! (Who doesn’t love stickers?)
Academic Planner: A Tool for Time Management®
If you’ve been a reader of the Paper Doll blog for a while, then you know that professional organizer Leslie Josel of Order Out of Chaos, is a colleague, friend, and fellow Cornell University alum. And I love every darned thing this smarty-skirt does!
(For more about Leslie, you can read Paper Doll Peeks Behind the Curtain with Superstar Coach, Author & Speaker Leslie Josel. Go. Read. Come back. We’ll wait.)
Paper Doll with Leslie Josel, © 2017 Best Results Organizing
I’ve written many, many times about Leslie’s Academic Planner: A Tool for Time Management®. The central concept behind the planner is the need to better enable students to “see” time and all of the related obligations. If you’re brand new to the Academic Planner, you can start here:
The Academic Planner has even won the 2018, 2020, and 2022 Family Choice Award!
The spiral-bound 2022-2023 Academic Planner comes in two sizes: letter-sized planner with after-school planning (8 1/2″ x 11″) and smaller personal-sized with all-day planning (8 1/4″ x 8 1/2″), both for $19.99. Based on an academic year calendar, the planners run July through June.
Four styles of planners in each size
The letter-sized planners with after-school planning come in LimeLight, Pretty In Pink, Blues Brothers, and WhiteOut. The interior pages measure 7” x 11”, offering up more than the typical space for writing down assignments and activities. It has 7 subject boxes and after-school planning capabilities starting at 2p.m., and is ideal for elementary, middle, and high school students and those that are virtual learning or homeschooled.
The smaller, personal-sized planner with all-day planning come in Men in Black, Purple Rain, Yellow Submarine, and AquaMan. They have 6 subject boxes and all-day planning capabilities, starting at 8:00am. These work well for high school, college, and homeschool students and even adults!
Introductory Pages
The front pages, measuring the same size as the front and rear cover of the planner, include:
- a contact information section so a lost planner can be easily returned
- a class schedule (subject, period, instructor, room #, days) to quickly acclimate students for the new year (and give a fellow student, armed with the contact info, an easy way to find the owner at the right classroom and return a lost planner)
- a Welcome Letter from Leslie to parents
- a detailed set of Planner Pointers, providing excellent guiding tips for making smart use of the planner. (My favorite? Writing “No Homework” if none was assigned so the student never has to wonder if he or she just forgot to write something down.)
- a two-page Planner Use Guide, showing the planner in action — noting assignments, reminders (“Get permission slips signed!”), after-school activities and previews for the next week
- a Study Planning Guide to help prepare for tests and quizzes
- a sample Project Planning Guide to help plan long-term assignments
- a two-page School Year at a Glance
Planner Pages
On the first and last (extra-sturdy) full-sized, the Academic Planner has a vertical index page that peeks out from behind (and to the left and right) of the actual planner pages. This index page means that students record their class subjects only once. Then everything on the upper calendar sections of the planner pages lines up with the appropriate class subjects, course by course, horizontally (with days of the week arrayed, vertically) across a two-page layout.
The next row in the smaller planner is for To-Do items by day. In the letter-sized planners, the left and right front pages provide hourly slots from 2 p.m. until 8 p.m. for students to log after school activities and obligations, like clubs, athletic practice, rehearsals, and jobs.
Other Features
- At the start of each month, there’s a left-side full-page monthly calendar with space to note major events, holidays, and vacations, and adequately plan longer-term projects.
- The right-side Notes page facing the calendar offers up ample room for planning, notes, and the kinds of serious thoughts only people between 12 and 18 can understand.
- There’s a clear poly pocket at the rear of the planner for safely keeping notes, permission slips, and other documents too small for a student’s binder.
- There are oodles of extras, like a library of printouts, downloads, videos, and “how-tos”, as well as downloadable resources like Project and Study Planning Guides, Time Trackers, Homework Checklists, Planner Pointers, Study Skills Videos.
- A bonus Academic Planner Accessories Pack (sold separately, for $10.99) includes a plastic page marker that clips into the spiral binding, so it’s easy to find the current week in the planner, a set of monthly tabs, and a really bright, sunny set of useful stickers.
Whew! That was a lot. To really do justice to the 2022-2023 Academic Planner: A Tool for Time Management®, take a detailed walk-through with Leslie herself. It’s like having a private coaching session!
And since this post is about saving money for back-to-school, use the promo code PLANNER20 at checkout to get 20% off any academic planners you purchase directly from the Order Out of Chaos website. This promo code expires September 30, 2022.
(If you prefer to order through Amazon, the 8 1/2″ x11″ planner and 8 1/2″ x 8 1/4″ planner sell for the same price.)
Enjoy your summer, but remember that a little planning and organizing now can make back-to-school shopping less costly, less stressful, and a bit more sunny!
And, just a reminder if you missed my last post, Paper Doll on Planning & Prioritizing for Leadership, we’re only one week into the free, 3-week, The Leader’s Asset interview series. You can still register and catch my interview this Wednesday, July 27, 2022.
Disclosure: Some of the links above are affiliate links, and I may get a small remuneration (at no additional cost to you) if you make a purchase after clicking through to the resulting pages. The opinions, as always, are my own. (Seriously, who else would claim them?)
Vibrant and Vertical: Organizing Paper for Back-to-School
What time is it? (No, this isn’t a follow-up to my Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is? 5 Strategies to Cope With Pandemic Time Dilation from May 2020, though that may be worth a visit — for all of us.)
It’s Back-to-School Time! (If you said “Howdy Doody Time,” thanks for playing our Boomer Edition!)
THE ASPIRATIONAL PROMISE OF NEW SCHOOL SUPPLIES
After almost 18 months of weirdness and boondoggles, kerfuffles and plague-related malarkey, time has little meaning. But really and truly, it’s back-to-school time. And reminders are everywhere. Leaving aside the specific anxieties of returning to school in this (oh, man, I’m going to say it) unprecedented era, the new school year (whether you’re 5 and entering kindergarten or 55 and going back to finish a degree) holds both panic and potential. We may joke about it, but this tweet holds so much truth!
kids went shopping for school supplies and I am pleased to report the pure, uncut optimism of a new trapper keeper in a kid’s hands for the upcoming school year “is going to finally change EVERYTHING and keep me organized for once!” is still alive and well
— Matt Haughey (@mathowie) August 14, 2021
Yes, friends, Mead is still making those Trapper Keepers, the basis for so many our searches for perfect organizing systems in adulthood. Be honest, if you could find something that reflected your personality and offered the flexibility a three-ring binder, hole-punched two-pocket folders, a clipboard, and a Velcro closure, wouldn’t you carry it? Or drive it? Or marry it? (Just me?)
Personally, I always liked those back-to-school days, at least the ones in August, a full month before we Western New Yorkers went back. (Here in the Southeast, kids have been back at school a few weeks in 90° heat. Oy.) August was prime aspirational time. It was the back-to-school issue of Seventeen Magazine, with everything wool and plaid and new.
Our schools didn’t provide lists of what was required for class until the first day of school, but that didn’t mean I was willing to wait. I loved this time of year, and dragged Paper Mommy into the void — I mean, into the school sales. And I vehemently insisted on getting everything all-new every year, even these:
(You know you had them. You know that you probably have no recollection of how to bisect an angle and probably couldn’t figure out what to do with either the compass or the protractor right now, short of making a circle and then cringing when the point of the compass went skittering across the table, making that screechy noise.)
But anyway, do as I say, not as I did. Better yet, do as my colleague Amy Slenker posited in her excellent blog post, 7 Easy Ways to Get Organized for Back to School when she noted, “June scissors work in August, right?” Right!
Of course, as adults, we know that motivation can come in all shapes and sizes, and when the idea of sitting at our desks bring misery, a new set of never-before-used file folders and a snazzy new planner can ramp up our enthusiasm. Also right!
Somewhere in between buying all new everything (even though some things never left your cubby between September and June) and using the same-old, same-old, there’s a sweet spot. So today, we’re just going to look at a few things that might make back-to-school for students of all ages just a little more colorfully delightful.
OPT FOR WHAT’S VIBRANT AND VERTICAL
There’s lots of research showing that color can impact mood. Greens are calming, while reds are stimulating. Studies show that blue “encourages intellectual activity, reason, and logical thought.” Yellow is associated with happy moods, self-esteem and playfulness. While fashion designers may occasionally opt for greys and blacks to convey sophistication, unless your student is a goth (are there still goths?) adding a little vibrancy and color can open up some opportunities, motivationally-speaking.
Color grabs our attention, conveys meaning, and clarifies boundaries. It also just makes us happy. For example, what kind of feeling washes over you when you see this picture?
Optimism? Excitement for new beginnings? I took a new 64-box of Crayolas off to college with me in 1985, and I guarantee you I was not the only one!
In addition to the vibrancy of great colors, another boost for students, whether they’re in elementary school or grad school, is the advantage of the vertical hold. We’ve talked a LOT over the years about how vertical solutions aid in organizing, but the key is that when our resources stand attention, we pay attention to them and are less likely to let them get cluttered..
ORGANIZE PAPERS COLORFULLY
College students might appreciate something that keeps papers organized by class, fits squarely in a backpack, but can be displayed easily in a dorm room (their own, or their study-buddy’s) or an empty classroom.
For something both elegant and bright, the Smead Cascading Wall Organizer might be just the ticket.
A revamp of the the classic version, this colorful Gen 2 organizer can hang on the wall or anywhere from a nail, hook (you sent your kid to college with a variety pack of Command Hooks, right?) or even a hanger to reduce clutter on the desktop.
In durable, bright, and easy-to-clean polypropylene, the six colorful (yellow, orange, fuscia, green, blue, and purple) letter-size pockets can be removed to take to class, the library, or an extra-curricular meeting. (Each holds 50 sheets.)
Use the clear front pocket to show the current month’s calendar, a project timeline, or a photo of far-flung friends. There’s a 3-part hanger (use one loop or all three), and an elastic cord closure for putting it all together and stowing it away.
The whole thing is PVC-free and acid-free, and measures 14 1/4″ wide by 24″ high (when fully expanded). Available directly from Smead for $17.99, or you can find it on Amazon for $11.29.
There are two variations on the theme if these brights are too vibrant for you or your student. There’s a pastel version of the Cascading Wall Organizer (well, it’s translucent, but the folders are pastel), also $17.99 at Smead or $13.78 at Amazon:
as well as one with jewel tones for $13.99 (which is Paper Doll’s personal favorite, in case you were wondering).
The Container Store has a similar product, its Multi-Color Cascading 6-Pocket Letter File Wall Organizer Tote.
It measures 13 3/8″ wide by 10 1/2″ high, and when it’s not fully extended, it folds and collapses into a 1 1/2″ thick tote. Two snap closures open to reveal six cascading pockets (red, orange, yellow, green, teal, and dark blue) that hold letter-sized interior file folders (sold separately). You can label the tabbed pockets, and there’s both a handle for carrying the closed tote and a ring for hanging it for display.
If you like the idea of bright colors and poly folders but your older student already has a great desktop file system in place and doesn’t need to be mobile, consider Smead’s SuperTab® Poly File Folders. A box of 1/3-cut (left/middle/right) tabbed, letter-size poly folders come 18 per assorted pack, with three folders, each, in blue, green, orange, pink, purple, and yellow. The durable folders are acid-free and PVC-free for long lasting durability. (And nowadays, I’m a super-fan of poly, because you can wipe it down with a Clorox disinfecting wipe.)
Oversize SuperTabs have a 90% larger labeling area than standard file folders, allowing you to use larger text, larger labels, or more lines of description. Although their tabs are larger than traditional file folders, they’ll nonetheless fit traditional vertical file drawers. These cheery Smead SuperTab® Poly File Folders run $17.06 at Smead or $16.44 at Amazon.
A WARNING ABOUT COLOR-CODING
I should note, I often warn against the potential problem of color-coding files. When a client invests in traditional boxes of assorted colored file folders (or boxes in multiple, different colors), I tend to worry about the Ralph Waldo Emerson’s quote, “Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.”
But wait, you might be thinking. Isn’t consistency the key to organizing?
When you color-code your folder system, it makes it easy to organize thematically. Green is biology (or family finances) and blue is literature (or insurance) and red is calculus (or medical records). But what happens when you need to make a new folder but run out of the color you need? For most people, this causes a breakdown in the system. Lacking the right folder, people often just stop filing!
But you see, Emerson’s entire quote is rarely given. It’s actually, “A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines.”
But you are no fool! If lack of the right color is a problem for you or your student, just grab a different color folder and a Post-it! Note. Write a temporary label on the top, and stick it on the inside of the folder so that the label appears just about where a permanent label belongs. (Then go order a box of folders and get on with your day!)
HOMESCHOOL CHEER
If your student is 8 rather than 18, and you’re still doing the home-schooling thing this year (either because you’d planned it or because everyone got sent home a few days into the school year), you might want a colorful, vertical solution for making your home-school “classroom” feeling a little more official.
I like to borrow this trick from teachers who are tight on space in their classrooms or don’t have a base of operations. Scholastic’s File Organizer Pocket Chart lets you create a bright, vertical HQ for your home-schooling student’s worksheets, problem sets, instruction sheets, and other handouts.
Just as teacher would do in the classroom, you can use the ten sturdy pockets to hold letter-size file folders. The pocket chart is lightweight but made of durable nylon, and measures 14″ wide by 46 1/2″ high. There are three reinforced grommets at the top for hanging the chart on the wall or the back of a door. The pocket chart runs $15 on Amazon.
ACCENTUATE THE POSITIVE WITH A POP OF COLOR
Colorful highlighting is a great way to make important points stand out. But have you or your student ever highlighted the wrong thing? It’s a bummer!
But did you know there are ERASABLE HIGHLIGHTERS? (I know! I can tell that you’re squealing, too!)
Crayola’s Take Note Erasable Highlighters let you highlight (or underline!) in six cheery colors (pink, orange, yellow, teal, blue, and purple). You can color-code your highlighting by class or use different colors for different types of information (yellow for the test, purple for a book report, etc.). And a set of six is only $5.99!
Back-to-School Organizing News You Can Use: 3 Solutions to Save Time, Money, and Serenity
Wait, it was just Independence Day! Why are we talking about back-to-school organizing? In ye olden days, when I grew up in Buffalo, New York, where kids still don’t go back to school until after Labor Day, talking about back-to-school so soon after the 4th of July would be like stores putting up Christmas decorations right after Halloween. (Oh…right.)
But there’s a method to the madness. In many parts of the country, students go back to school in the middle of the summer. In my county in Tennessee, the public schools start on August 3rd, and mere miles from me in Georgia, students go back on the first of August. But even for kids going back to school in September, that’s only about eight weeks from now. Instead of rushing to get everything done, here’s a roundup of ways to organize your approach to the back-to-school season.
ORGANIZE YOUR ADHD STUDENT – FREE WEBINAR
Paper Doll‘s colleagues (and longtime friends), Michelle Cooper and Michelle Grey of Student Organizers of Atlanta will be presenting a free, live webinar entitled Practical Organization and Time Management Strategies for Middle and High Schoolers with ADHD on July 20, 2017, at 1 p.m. ET.
Presented as part of ADDitude Magazine‘s ongoing webinar series, the webinar will provide strategies for:
- Managing the day-to-day organizational challenges facing students both inside and outside of the classroom
- Understanding your child’s “thinking style” and finding organizing methods and tools that fit his or her style
- Using organizational systems that will improve his or her chances of academic success
- Collaborating with your child and the teachers to support his or her efforts at organization
- Using products, books, and websites to ease the process of organization for your student
Register for the webinar and take it live, or you can use the replay link to watch (or rewatch) the webinar for free, any time up through next January 20, 2018.
Learn more about ADDitude and check out the other webinars in the series. If your child is heading to college, both of you might want to watch the webinar on July 11, 2017, entitled The College Transition Guide for Teens with ADHD.
ORGANIZE YOUR FINANCES – TAX-FREE HOLIDAYS
Over the four weekends from July 21 through August 13, sixteen states will be having tax-free holiday weekends. In general, these states allow retailers to sell clothing and footwear, school supplies, computers, and sometimes backpacks, books, and other “tangible personal property” without charging sales tax. In my state, that’s a savings of 9.25%. Combine that with various 10%-25%-off sales, and that’s a great opportunity to stock up on necessities.
Note: Some states, such as Georgia, have discontinued their tax-free holidays, so be sure to check out states adjacent to yours.
Click on the name of your nearest state to be directed to that state’s official tax-free holiday page.
Alabama (July 21-23, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing (up to $100), Computers (up to $750), School supplies (up to $50), Books (up to $30)
Arkansas (August 5-6, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing and footwear (up to $100), Clothing accessories and equipment (up to $50), School and academic art supplies (no dollar limit)
Connecticut (August 20-26, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing and footwear (up to $100)
Florida (August 4-6, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing, footwear, wallets, and bags (up to $60), School supplies (up to $15/item), Computers (up to $750)
Iowa (August 4-5, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing and footwear (up to $100)
Louisiana (August 4-5, 2017)
Tax-free: Tangible Personal Property (3% tax rate up to $2,500; a 2% state sales tax exemption applies, so qualified purchases are subject to only 3% state sales tax)
Maryland (August 13-19, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing & footwear (up to $100)
Mississippi (July 28-29, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing & footwear (up to $100)
Missouri (August 4-6, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing (up to $100), Computers/peripherals (up to $1,500), Software (up to $350), Graphing calculators (up to $150), School supplies (up to $50)
New Mexico (August 4-6, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing and footwear (up to $100), Computers, tablets, and e-readers (up to $1,000), Computer equipment (up to $500), Book bags and backpacks (up to $100 per item), maps and globes (up to $100 per item), Calculators (up to $200), School supplies (up to $30)
Ohio (August 4-6, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing (up to $75), School supplies (up to $20)
Oklahoma (August 4-6, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing and footwear (up to $100)
South Carolina (August 4-6, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing (no limit) School supplies (no limit), Computers, printers, peripherals, and software (no limit)
Tennessee (July 28-30, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing (up to $100), School and art supplies (up to $100), Computers (up to $1,500)
Texas (August 11-13, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing, backpacks and school supplies (up to $100)
Virginia (August 4-6, 2017)
Tax-free: Clothing (up to $100), School supplies (up to $20), Energy Star products (up to $2,500) and a variety of hurricane-preparedness items.
Tax-free holiday tips:
- The price limits generally refer to the price-per-item cost, not your entire purchase. However, if a store is placing limits on entire purchases and you have a large family, you might want to have your older, more responsible children stand in line and pay with cash.
- Make a list of what each child needs before you get to the store. (Check with your school to see if a grade-appropriate list has been posted online.) It’s tempting to buy anything that seems like a bargain, but acquiring what you don’t need just because it’s a “deal” is the fast track to clutter.
- Set a budget for each shopping category.
- Shopping with smaller children will stress you (and your kids) out, so consider trading shopping and babysitting time with a friend or split babysitter costs while you and your friend hunt for bargains together. Let older children participate – use it as an opportunity to practice math skills (“How much is this shirt if it’s marked as 15% off?”) and encourage them in finding good deals on high-quality products. The more responsible they are, consider rewarding them with the amount by which they came in under budget to apply toward something fun.
- Remember to keep your receipts in case you find that you need to return something; note each retailer’s return policy.
ORGANIZE YOUR STUDENT’S SCHEDULE – A NEW KIND OF PLANNER
As mentioned a few weeks back when I was talking about Time Timer, many people, especially students, can have trouble mastering the concept of the passing of time, which makes it difficult to properly plan academic and life tasks. When I was in middle and high school, almost nobody used a planner or a calendar. These were the days when Trapper Keepers were the height of organizational technology and pocket-sized assignment notebooks yielded the best option for academic time management. Somewhere during the <mumble mumble> intervening decades, schools started providing and/or requiring student planners to help keep up with homework assignments, projects, and tests.
These planners give students the opportunity to mark down what they must do. It’s not clear, however, that students get the time management skills and system-training they need to master the intricacies of juggling academics, extracurriculars, part-time jobs, and familial obligations, or learn when to complete it all. That’s where Leslie Josel comes in.
Professional organizer Leslie Josel of Order Out of Chaos, is not just a colleague and friend; she’s also a fellow Cornell University alum, so when I first heard about her product line for students, I paid particular attention.
Paper Doll with Leslie Josel, © 2017 Best Results Organizing
At first, Leslie’s organizing practice concentrated on working with chronically disorganized clients, people with ADHD, students with learning challenges, and clients with hoarding behaviors. Eventually, (like Michelle and Michelle, above), she expanded her offerings to include coaching services for both students and parents. In 2016, Leslie expanded her company’s product division and officially launched Products Designed With Students in Mind.
Leslie’s big idea was the Academic Planner: A Tool for Time Management®. The 2017-2018 Academic Planner comes in two sizes: letter-sized (8 1/2″ x 11″) and personal-sized (8 1/4″ x 8 1/2″), both for $18.99. Based on an academic year calendar, the planners run July through June. They’re spiral bound, but also three-hole punched to allow students to pop them right into their binders.
Each size is available in four styles of planners: Jamie (black), Riley (orange/blue), Taylor (white) and Paper Doll‘s personal favorite, Violet (pink/purple). The interior pages measure 7” x 11”, offering up more than the typical space for writing down assignments and activities.
Introductory Pages
The front pages, measuring the same size as the front and rear cover of the planner, include:
- a contact information section so a lost planner can be easily returned
- a class schedule (subject, period, instructor, room #, days) to quickly acclimate students for the new year (and give a fellow student, armed with the contact info, an easy way to find the owner at the right classroom and return a lost planner)
- a Welcome Letter from Leslie to parents
- a detailed set of Planner Pointers, providing excellent guiding tips for making smart use of the planner. (My favorite? Writing “No Homework” if none was assigned so the student never has to wonder if he or she just forgot to write something down.)
- a two-page Planner Use Guide, showing the planner in action — noting assignments, reminders (“Get permission slips signed!”), after-school activities and previews for the next week
- Homework Helpers, tips that could only come from a professional organizer experienced with helping students gain control of their work.
- a sample Project Planning Guide to help plan long-term assignments (Students can download more guides for future projects.)
- a two-page School Year at a Glance
Planner Pages
On the last (extra-sturdy) full-sized front page, the Academic Planner has a vertical index page that peeks out from behind (and to the left) of the actual planner pages. This index page means that students record their class subjects (in up to 7 subject boxes) only once. Then everything on the upper calendar sections of the planner pages lines up with the appropriate class subjects, course by course, horizontally (with days of the week arrayed, vertically) across a two-page layout. (You can download a sample planner page.)
The next row (in the personal-sized planner, only) is for To Do items.
Below that, there’s an hour-by-hour schedule from 8 a.m. until 8 p.m. Typical student planners only cover the academic day and don’t take into account post-school activities, like doctor’s appointments, tutoring, clubs, rehearsals, sports, and jobs. This planner provides oodles of space for all of those activities and recognizing conflicts (just like in the best calendar planners for adults). This really helps students see the forest and the trees of weekly time management.
Other Features
- At the start of each month, there’s a left-side full-page monthly calendar with space to note major events, holidays, and vacations, and adequately plan longer-term projects.
- The right-side Notes page facing the calendar offers up ample room for planning, notes, and the kinds of serious thoughts only people between 12 and 18 can understand.
- There’s a clear poly pocket at the rear of the planner for safely keeping notes, permission slips, and other documents too small for a student’s binder.
- A bonus Academic Planner Accessories Pack (sold separately, for $8.97) includes a plastic page marker that clips into the spiral binding, so it’s easy to find the current week in the planner, a set of monthly tabs, and a really bright, sunny set of useful stickers.
But of course, measurements, styles, and features don’t give credit to what the 2017-2018 Academic Planner: A Tool for Time Management® can actually do to help students. For that, let’s go to the video!
Enjoy your summer, but remember that a little organizing now can make back-to-school the most wonderful time of the year!
Disclosure: Some of the links above are affiliate links, and I may get a small remuneration (at no additional cost to you) if you make a purchase after clicking through to the resulting pages. The opinions, as always, are my own. (Seriously, who else would claim them?)
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