Yes
A magic one is an insulator.
Conductor
a pencil eraser is a conductor .
In short, yes. The real question should be, isn't there a material that you can use that is superior to the conductivity of an eraser. <><><> Most chaklboard erasers are felt, which is NOT a conductor. When dry, a fairly good insulator.
Note: "electricity" is not conducted, only electrical current (the flow of electrons) is. Electricity is the field that covers all things electrical. The wood in a pencil is an insulator. If it is wet, it is a poorer insulator, but only a poor conductor. The carbon (lead) in the pencil is a poor conductor. The metal holding the eraser is a good conductor. The rubber eraser is a poor conductor. You really have to address the conductivity of specific substances, not items that are build from a variety of substances.
It would be an insulator- chalk board erasers normally consist of two parts, a wooden handle and a soft pad that wipes off the chalk from the board. Neither of these parts are conductors of electricity.
Chalkboard erasers are made of felt. Felt is hair. Hair does not conduct electricity. Felt has lots of air entrained between the hair fibers so, it conducts heat poorly, too.
The eraser poem the eraser poe the eraser po the eraser p the eraser the erase the eras the era the er the e the th t .
three uses of an eraser is a white board eraser a pencil eraser and a black board eraser
erase something and get the shavings from the eraser and melt them together and you are done
in 1770 the eraser was made
The plural of eraser is erasers.