Keep the topic focused on one common school-related scam
This handwritten newspaper works best when it focuses on part-time brushing scams instead of discussing every kind of fraud at once. A single clear topic helps students remember the warning signs more easily. The title can be direct and cautionary, such as “Is a High-Pay Part-Time Job Really Safe?”
In the opening lines, explain that scammers often advertise easy jobs, fast payment, and work-from-home tasks, then trick students into sending money first.
Plan the page with clear sections
Section 1: Common scam phrases
- Earn money with just a few clicks
- No experience needed, students welcome
- Pay first and get your money back right away
- Complete more tasks before you can withdraw
Section 2: How the scam usually works
- Scammers post part-time ads in chat groups, comments, or private messages
- They give a small reward first to build trust
- They ask for larger and repeated payments
- They invent excuses like account freezing or operation errors to demand more money
Section 3: Easy red flags to spot
- Unusually high promised income
- Requests to pay first
- Pressure to act immediately
- Unknown apps or private transfer accounts
This structure makes the page easier to read and helps teachers and parents see the educational value quickly.
Ready-to-use text for the handwritten newspaper
Sample paragraph: Part-time jobs can help students learn responsibility, but fake part-time offers can also be traps. When someone says you can earn quick money by brushing orders or paying first for rewards later, you should be careful. Real and legitimate jobs do not ask students to keep transferring money. We should stay calm, ask more questions, and protect our money, accounts, and personal information.
Short warning slogans:
- High pay can hide a trap
- Brushing for commission is not free money
- If money must go first, stop and check
- Stay alert and keep the campus safe
Use a design that highlights warning points
A strong layout can place the main title in the center and arrange four small sections around it: scam process, warning signs, correct action, and anti-fraud slogans. Red can be used for warnings, blue for main text, and yellow for key reminders.
Simple icons like a shield, lock, exclamation mark, or magnifying glass can make the page more vivid. Keep decorations light so the safety message stays clear. Important phrases such as do not trust, do not transfer, do not share can be bolded.
End with practical action steps
Many handwritten newspapers explain the scam but forget to say what to do next. A final checklist makes the poster much more useful:
- Ask parents or teachers before accepting unknown part-time work
- Be extra careful if any task requires advance payment
- Do not click suspicious links or install unknown apps
- Stop immediately and keep records if something feels wrong
- Check first before making any decision
With these parts, the handwritten newspaper becomes more than a warning poster. It becomes a practical school safety guide. After organizing your text, you can also continue the design in the Smart Handwritten Newspaper WeChat mini program for a cleaner final result.