Start with a clear focus: explain the part-time job scam
This kind of handwritten newspaper works best when it clearly shows how a “simple online job” can turn into a money-loss trap. The main idea should be that scammers use fake part-time offers, small rewards, and repeated payment requests to trick people.
You can open with a short explanation: some strangers advertise easy online jobs such as liking posts, following shops, or completing small tasks. At first, they may return a little money to gain trust, but later they ask for larger payments and refuse to return the money.
A four-part layout is easy to read and easy to make
Part 1: What the scam looks like
- Ads say the job is easy and flexible
- Small tasks seem to bring quick rewards
- Then the victim is asked to pay first
- Scammers keep asking for more money with excuses
Part 2: Warning signs
- Only contact through private chat apps
- Promises of high pay with no risk
- Pressure to act immediately
- Requests to keep everything secret
Part 3: What to do correctly
- Ask parents or teachers before trusting any job ad
- Never believe “pay first, earn later” tasks
- Do not click unknown work links
- Do not share bank details, passwords, or codes
Part 4: Safety slogans
- Easy money can hide a scam
- Do not trust strange part-time offers
- No greed, no transfer, no被骗 loss
Ready-to-use writing material
Sample paragraph: Online part-time jobs may look simple, but many are actually scams. Scammers often give a small reward first to lower people’s guard, then ask for more payments step by step. We should remember that any job asking for advance payment, repeated recharge, or transfer is very likely unsafe. When we see suspicious job information, we should ask parents or teachers before doing anything.
Short reminder: There is no easy money without risk.
Color and drawing ideas
Use blue, orange, or red as the main colors to create a clear warning feeling. Simple drawings such as a phone, shield, exclamation mark, wallet, or magnifying glass can make the page more lively and match the anti-fraud theme.
The main title can stay in the center, with arrows pointing to sections like “Scam Steps,” “Warning Signs,” “Safe Actions,” and “Slogans.” If there is extra space, add a small box called “What I Will Do” and write: no transfer, no secret sharing, check first, ask adults.
How to end the poster well
You can finish with a short call to action: stay alert, do not trust unknown part-time offers, and tell parents or teachers when something feels suspicious. If you want to keep improving your layout and design, you can also continue organizing your handwritten newspaper in the Smart Handwritten Newspaper WeChat mini program.