Focus the Theme on a School Fire Drill
This kind of handwritten newspaper works best when it highlights fire escape in a school setting. Compared with a general fire safety page, it should stress listening to instructions, staying calm, and evacuating in order. Titles such as “School Fire Drill,” “What to Do When the Alarm Rings,” or “Safe Evacuation Steps” make the topic clear at first sight.
For primary school students, it is better to avoid overly broad content. Build the page around the key actions that happen during a real drill so the text is easier to understand and copy.
Section Ideas Students Can Use Directly
Section 1: The Drill Begins
You can write: When the alarm sounds, do not panic or play around. Listen to the teacher and get ready to leave quickly.
Section 2: Correct Escape Actions
- Cover your nose and mouth with a wet towel or sleeve
- Keep your body low
- Follow the planned evacuation route
- Walk on the right side and do not push
Section 3: Things You Must Not Do
- Do not stop to collect belongings
- Do not run in the wrong direction
- Do not go back to the classroom
- Do not stand and watch in the hallway
Section 4: After Reaching Safety
After arriving at the playground or another open safe area, line up with the class, check attendance, and wait quietly for the teacher’s next instruction.
Short Text Materials for the Page
To make the handwritten newspaper feel more complete, add a few short and memorable lines:
- Remember the fire drill, evacuate calmly.
- When the alarm rings, move at once and stay low.
- In a fire escape, staying calm matters most.
- One good drill builds stronger safety awareness.
These lines fit well in blank spaces, side boxes, or at the bottom of the page.
Make the Layout Easy to Follow
A good structure is top title, middle process, and bottom reminder. In the center, use arrows to connect “alarm rings - cover nose and mouth - bend low - evacuate - gather safely,” so readers can follow the steps naturally.
For colors, red, orange, and yellow help show the fire safety theme, while blue or green can balance the page. Small drawings such as an extinguisher, fire bell, exit sign, or footsteps can make the page lively without making it crowded.
Practical Tips for Parents and Teachers
If this is a class assignment, first decide on four sections, then prepare two to four short sentences for each one, and finally add borders and simple drawings. This keeps the page focused and manageable. Younger students can use fewer words and more icons, while older students can add small explanations such as why staying low is important.
After finishing a draft, you can continue polishing the page in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program to get a neater and more balanced result.