Build the page around real-life safety situations
For this kind of handwritten newspaper, the best approach is not to list too many facts. A clearer way is to focus on four ideas: spot the risk, stay calm, ask for help, protect yourself. The title can mention familiar situations such as after school, on campus, or online, so the purpose is obvious at first glance.
For younger students, add a simple theme line under the title, such as “Say no, ask for help, stay safe.” This makes the whole page easier to understand and more useful in class displays.
Three situations that work well on the page
Situation 1: A stranger talks to you or offers gifts
- Do not trust promises from strangers or go with them.
- Do not accept unknown gifts, snacks, or money requests.
- If something feels wrong, move to a crowded place or find a teacher, guard, or trusted adult.
Situation 2: Early signs of bullying at school
- Mean nicknames, deliberate exclusion, threats, and forced giving are all warning signs.
- Protect yourself first and step away from the conflict.
- Tell a teacher, parent, or another trusted adult as soon as possible.
Situation 3: Online chats and game-related scams
- Do not share your name, address, school, phone number, or passwords.
- Be careful with messages about free rewards, fake gifts, or recharge deals.
- Never send money or scan unknown codes without asking a parent.
Short phrases you can write directly
Useful handwritten newspapers often include short, memorable safety lines. Here are some options:
- Do not trust strange calls or random messages.
- Bullying is not a joke, and silence does not solve it.
- Step away first, then ask for help, then explain clearly.
- Do not chase small bargains or believe unknown promises.
- Say no bravely and talk to teachers or parents in time.
- Protecting yourself is smart, not weak.
These short lines fit well in side boxes, borders, mini columns, or a final message area.
A layout idea that looks neat and effective
A good design is “big title in the center + four situation cards around it.” Put the title and theme slogan in the middle, then create sections like “Anti-Scam Tips,” “Bullying Warning Signs,” “How to Protect Yourself,” and “Who Can Help.” This structure is easy to read and easy for students to complete.
- Use blue, green, or orange as the main colors for a bright and safe feeling.
- Draw simple icons like a shield, school gate, phone, backpack, or chat bubble.
- Highlight key lines in bold and avoid filling the whole page with long paragraphs.
- Leave some blank space so the page feels clean and organized.
How to finish the page with a strong ending
Instead of writing a long conclusion, end with a section called “What I Will Do.” Students can list three promises, such as not sharing personal information, asking for help when bullied, and telling adults about suspicious situations. This makes the page feel personal and practical.
If you want to keep improving your title style, section arrangement, or page design, you can continue making your work in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program for a cleaner and more complete safety-themed handwritten newspaper.