Start with familiar crowding situations on campus
An anti-stampede handwritten newspaper is most effective when it begins with places students know well. That makes the content practical instead of abstract. The title can highlight ideas such as orderly movement, safe stair use, or what to do in a crowd.
- Crowded stairways between classes
- Students rushing at the school gate
- Assemblies ending all at once
- Narrow hallways and corners
This opening section should help readers quickly connect the topic with real school life.
Build the page with short and useful content blocks
Section 1: Situations that may lead to danger
Use short reminders such as crowded passages, sudden stopping in a line, students moving in the opposite direction, or blocked sight at stair corners.
Section 2: Daily habits that prevent stampedes
- Walk on the right side
- Do not run or push on stairs
- Slow down when many people gather
- Listen to teachers and school instructions
Section 3: What to do if the crowd becomes unsafe
Keep your balance, do not bend down to pick things up, do not stop suddenly, and do not push through blindly. If someone falls, protect the head and chest and try to move to a safer position when possible.
Short phrases that work well on the poster
- Walk safely, do not rush.
- No pushing, no panic, stay calm.
- Order protects everyone.
- Respect life through safe behavior.
You can also add one small line about life education: caring for your own safety and the safety of others is a way of valuing life.
Use a layout that feels clear and caution-focused
This topic works well with a center title and surrounding information blocks. Put the main theme in the middle, then arrange risky scenes, prevention steps, emergency actions, and slogans around it. Arrows, simple stair shapes, and warning boxes can guide the reader's eyes.
- Make the title bold and easy to read
- Highlight warnings with red or orange
- Use numbers for step-by-step advice
- Keep drawings simple so the text stays clear
Make it readable for both children and teachers
Keep each paragraph short and action-based. Instead of long explanations, write what students should avoid and what they should do. That makes the poster easier to remember and more useful in real situations.
Before finishing, check whether the page includes school scenes, clear safety actions, and a life education message. If you want to refine the colors, title style, and section balance, you can continue designing in the Smart Handwritten Newspaper WeChat mini program.