Start with the main idea of the page
A class reading corner handwritten newspaper should show more than books. Its real focus is the reading culture of the class. A good page tells readers that this is a classroom where students enjoy reading, share books, and care for them together.
You can use titles like “Our Reading Corner,” “A Book-Loving Class,” “Reading with Friends,” or “Books Fill Our Classroom with Joy.” A short subtitle can make the theme feel warmer and more complete.
Simple sections that are easy to use
If you are not sure what to write, divide the page into small sections. Four to six sections are usually enough.
- About Our Reading Corner: Explain what the reading corner is and why the class has one.
- Book Recommendations: List two or three books with a short reason for each.
- Reading Rules: Include class habits such as returning books neatly and keeping pages clean.
- Borrowing Tips: Add short reminders for borrowing and returning books.
- Reading Quotes: Choose short positive lines about reading.
- What I Learned from Reading: Write a few sentences about personal gains.
Short text materials you can adapt
Reading corner introduction
Our class reading corner is a warm little place full of stories and knowledge. We can read storybooks, science books, and literature here during break time. It helps us enjoy reading and grow together.
Reading rules
- Turn pages gently and keep books clean.
- Do not draw on books or fold the corners.
- Return books to the correct place after reading.
- Share books politely and read in order.
Book recommendation ideas
You can recommend books such as science question books, fairy tales, fables, or traditional stories. Keep each reason short, such as “This book teaches us interesting facts” or “This story helps us understand kindness and courage.”
A layout that feels open and friendly
This theme looks great with a center illustration and text blocks around it. In the middle, draw a bookshelf, a stack of books, or children reading together. Then place the text sections on both sides or in the corners. This makes the page lively without looking crowded.
Choose soft and bright colors like light green, sky blue, warm yellow, or orange. Borders can be shaped like book pages, bookmarks, or leaves to match the reading theme naturally.
Add small class details to make it special
To make the handwritten newspaper feel unique to your class, add details such as “This Week’s Favorite Book,” “Our Class Reading Slogan,” or “A Message from the Reading Star.” These touches turn the page from a general reading poster into a real class-building work.
If you already have your topic but still need help with layout ideas and section matching, you can continue in the Zhihui Shouchao Bao WeChat mini program to organize your handwritten newspaper more easily.