Start by turning the topic into clear parts
When making a campus low-carbon action handwritten newspaper, the easiest mistake is letting the content become messy. A better way is to divide the page into several simple sections so readers can understand the message quickly.
- What is a low-carbon campus: explain the idea in short and easy words.
- Electricity-saving habits: list practical things students can do every day.
- My action checklist: make the page feel active and personal.
- School pledge: add a short call for action.
- Slogan corner: use eye-catching lines to decorate the page.
This kind of structure is easy for children to write and easy for teachers to review.
Ready-to-use text for the newspaper
Short introduction to a low-carbon campus
A low-carbon campus means saving energy, reducing waste, and protecting the environment in everyday school life. Saving one unit of electricity, using less paper, and avoiding waste are all parts of low-carbon action.
Electricity-saving tips
- Turn off classroom lights when leaving and use daylight when possible.
- Shut down computers and projectors when they are not in use.
- Set air conditioners reasonably and avoid opening doors and windows at the same time.
- Check fans, lights, and other switches before school ends.
- Take care of school equipment and avoid wasting public electricity.
Low-carbon actions I can do
- Bring a reusable bottle or cup.
- Use both sides of paper.
- Walk, bike, or share rides to school when possible.
- Build a clean and responsible campus through small daily habits.
Ways to make the layout more attractive
This theme works well with a center title and sections around it. Put the main heading in the middle and place different blocks around the page to keep everything neat.
- Main title colors: green, blue, and yellow create a fresh eco-friendly feeling.
- Section borders: use leaf, cloud, plug, light bulb, or bicycle shapes.
- Small decorations: the sun, trees, Earth, recycling marks, and footprints all match the topic.
- Text arrangement: short lists are better than long paragraphs.
Younger students can draw more and write less, while older students can add stronger pledges and action plans.
Short slogans and pledge lines
Slogans should be short and memorable. Here are a few that fit the theme well:
- Save electricity, start by turning off the lights.
- Low-carbon habits begin on campus.
- Protect energy, protect our future.
- Save a little today, make tomorrow greener.
- Build a green campus together.
A pledge line can say: Let us begin with every classroom, every desk, and every switch, and become active low-carbon students.
How to avoid a crowded or empty page
Some handwritten newspapers have too much text, while others look unfinished. A simple rule is to keep one block for facts, one for actions, one for slogans, and one for decorations.
- Write the title first, then plan the positions of the content blocks.
- Keep each section to about three to five lines of key points.
- Highlight important words such as low-carbon action, saving electricity, and green campus.
- Leave some corners for simple drawings so the page feels lively.
If you already have the topic and text ready, you can continue polishing the layout and style in the Smart Handwritten Newspaper WeChat mini program.