Start with a child-friendly core message
This kind of handwritten newspaper should not rely on broad slogans alone. A better approach is to center the page on two clear situations: what to do when you get lost and how to refuse unsafe contact from strangers. A bold title with a simple subtitle helps students understand the goal at a glance.
For younger children, keep the wording very short. For older students, you can add more situation-based guidance and step-by-step responses.
Build the page around four practical sections
Important information I should remember
- My full name and my parents' names
- At least one parent’s phone number
- My home address or community name
- The meeting point for family outings
What to do when a stranger talks to me
- Do not go anywhere with a stranger
- Do not accept gifts or food
- If someone says, “Your parents asked me to pick you up,” check first
- Say no loudly and move away if something feels wrong
How to ask for help when lost
- Stay where you are or go to the agreed meeting point
- Ask police officers, teachers, security guards, or service desk staff for help
- Explain your location clearly if borrowing a phone
- Do not follow someone to a quiet or hidden place
A short safety rhyme
You can add a simple line such as: Don’t run off, don’t follow; if in danger, shout for help; find police, find teachers; know your number, ask for aid.
Short text materials students can copy
This topic is better with short and clear lines instead of long paragraphs. These examples fit well in a handwritten newspaper:
- Stay close to your parents when going out.
- Even in crowded places, do not wander away alone.
- Be careful with strangers, even when they seem friendly.
- If you get separated, stay calm and do not run around.
- Ask trusted adults in uniform or official staff for help.
- Practice remembering family phone numbers and address details.
To make the page richer, you can also add reminders for places like shopping malls, parks, stations, and school gates.
Try a scene-map style layout
Instead of a standard block layout, this topic works especially well as a scene-based design. Put the main title in the center, then place small scenes around it, such as a mall, a school entrance, a park, or the road home. Next to each scene, add one clear safety reminder.
- Use blue, green, or orange for a clean and alert look
- Highlight key sentences with frames or color boxes
- Draw simple elements like children, signs, phones, police hats, or school bags
- Leave some white space so the page stays easy to read
Small details that improve classroom display
A strong safety handwritten newspaper does not need to be overly decorative. What matters most is that people can understand it quickly. Make the title larger, keep the body text in short points, and bold words like “refuse,” “ask for help,” “remember,” and “do not follow.”
If you already have a topic idea but want to refine the layout, section order, or color matching, you can continue polishing the design in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program.