Start with a clear message
If you want a practical and meaningful poster, focus on safe and polite behavior on buses and subways. This angle connects well with everyday school travel, so students can write from real experiences instead of using vague ideas.
The whole page can center on waiting in line, letting passengers get off first, staying steady inside the vehicle, and avoiding pushing or rough play. That makes the poster both educational and easy to understand.
A layout that looks neat and easy to read
This topic works well with a centered title and two or three content sections. Add simple drawings such as a bus, subway doors, traffic lights, station signs, or a crosswalk around the title.
- Left section: Safety rules for riding public transport
- Right section: Polite travel reminders
- Bottom section: A rhyme, slogan, or quick scenario check
- Corner decorations: Safety signs, arrows, footprints, small station icons
If you have more space, add a small section called “What I should do on the way home from school” to make the poster feel even more relevant.
Ready-to-use writing material
Opening paragraph
Civilized travel is not only about following road rules. We should also stay safe and polite when riding buses and subways. Waiting in line, not pushing, letting others get off first, and holding the handrail are all good habits. Every safe ride begins with responsible behavior.
Key safety points
- Wait at the station or in the marked area. Do not chase or stop a moving vehicle.
- Get on and off only after the vehicle stops fully.
- Let passengers get off first, then board in order.
- Hold the handrail and do not run or play inside the vehicle.
- Do not put your head or hands out of the window.
- When taking the subway, wait behind the safety line and do not lean on the doors.
- Offer your seat to elderly people, young children, or adults carrying babies when needed.
Short rhyme
Wait in line and do not race, board with care and leave some space. Let them exit, then step in, safe and polite is how we win.
How to make “civilized travel” feel more lively
Many students only list rules, which can make the poster feel stiff. A better way is to add short daily-life situations.
- Write a small example about classmates lining up after school to take the bus.
- Compare safe behavior with unsafe behavior and show the different results.
- Add a closing sentence encouraging everyone to be a polite and careful passenger.
This makes the poster more natural, readable, and suitable for school assignments.
Color and decoration tips
Good color choices for this theme are blue, green, yellow, and red. Blue and green can be used for borders or section boxes, while yellow and red can highlight safety reminders and key points.
- Make the main title large and easy to notice.
- Keep subheadings short so the layout stays clean.
- Use only a few simple drawings, such as a bus, subway door, station sign, and traffic light.
- Bold the most important sentences to guide reading.
If you want to keep improving the layout or prepare a cleaner version for copying, you can continue designing in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program.