Start with a theme that is easy to develop
If you want the poster to be meaningful and visually clear, use a main theme such as “Cherish Life, Stay Away from Drugs”. A subtitle like “Know the harm, learn to refuse, protect yourself” works well for student projects and makes the content easier to divide into sections.
Place the title in the top center with bold lettering. Around it, you can add positive elements such as a safety shield, leaves, sunshine, or anti-drug symbols. Try to keep the page clean, bright, and suitable for children instead of using overly harsh imagery.
What to write in the main body
Section 1: What are drugs
Explain in simple words that drugs are harmful substances that damage health, affect study and daily life, and bring harm to families and society. For younger students, focus on safety awareness: do not touch unknown items, and do not take food or drinks from strangers.
Section 2: Why drugs are dangerous
- They can harm the brain and body.
- They affect judgment and normal growth.
- They can damage family happiness and personal future.
- They may lead to serious legal consequences.
Section 3: What students should do
- Stay away from risky places and bad influences.
- Do not accept unknown food, drinks, or gifts.
- Tell parents or teachers if something feels wrong.
- Build healthy hobbies and strong self-protection awareness.
Short lines you can copy onto the poster
If the page still feels empty, add a few short anti-drug statements:
- Cherish life and stay away from drugs.
- Grow up healthy and keep danger away.
- Be alert and refuse unknown temptation.
- Protect yourself and care for your family.
- Say no to drugs and yes to a bright future.
You may also include a short pledge asking students to learn anti-drug knowledge, value campus life, refuse temptation, and help build a safe and healthy environment.
A layout that looks complete and organized
A practical layout is title on top, knowledge on the left, dangers on the right, and action tips at the bottom. This makes the reading order easy to follow and helps teachers and classmates see the key points quickly.
Use a border around the page and simple colors like green, blue, and a little red for emphasis. If there is empty space, add small drawings such as shields, hearts, books, sunflowers, or ribbons to make the poster look fuller.
Easy making tips for primary school students
- Sketch the sections lightly in pencil first.
- Keep each part short and neat, about three to five lines.
- Highlight important words like “harm,” “refuse,” and “protect yourself.”
- Use simple icons instead of complicated drawings.
- Check at the end whether the title is clear and the message is positive.
If you want more layout ideas and ready-to-organize poster content, you can continue in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program and refine your anti-drug handwritten newspaper project there.