Start with a clear focus instead of a vague slogan
When making a drug prevention handwritten newspaper, many students only write broad slogans, and the page ends up looking empty. A better way is to narrow the topic into practical angles such as how to spot risky situations, why students should stay away from drugs, and what to do if something seems suspicious. This makes the page easier to organize and more useful for school display.
This topic works well around four key ideas: recognize, refuse, seek help, and share awareness.
Useful sections you can put on the page
Section 1: What drug prevention means
Write a short introduction: drug prevention means refusing harmful substances and building self-protection awareness. Students should avoid curiosity, avoid trying unknown things, and avoid spreading unsafe behavior. This short part fits well under the main title.
Section 2: Risks students should watch for
- Do not accept unknown food or drinks from strangers.
- Be careful with words like “just try once,” “it helps you relax,” or “it makes you feel better fast.”
- Avoid unsafe places with poor supervision.
- If you notice suspicious items or behavior, tell parents or teachers in time.
Section 3: A short refusal rhyme
You can write simple lines such as: Do not eat unknown things, say no to risky offers; leave quickly when something feels wrong, and tell a parent or teacher. This kind of short text is easy to remember and looks good in a side box.
Section 4: What I can do
Students can join school activities, share safety ideas with family members, remind friends to stay cautious, and learn basic legal and safety knowledge. This section helps the page move from awareness to action.
Short text materials for students
Slogan ideas: Cherish life, stay away from drugs; Healthy growth starts with refusal; Stay alert and protect your future; Learn prevention, protect the campus.
Short paragraph: Drugs can harm health and also hurt families and society. Young students are still growing, so it is important to build strong self-protection awareness. When facing tempting words or unknown items, we should say no with courage. By learning prevention knowledge and making safe choices, we can help build a healthy campus.
Small decorative phrases: Do not try, do not trust blindly, do not follow others, do not take chances. These short phrases are suitable for borders and highlights.
How to arrange the layout neatly
For an A4 or larger page, try a top-and-bottom structure. Put the title and a main drawing at the top, place safety reminders and the refusal rhyme in the middle, and divide the bottom into two or three parts for slogans, short writing, and action tips.
- Use bold blue, green, or red for the title to show seriousness and warning.
- Add borders with shields, warning signs, leaves, books, or campus elements.
- Choose positive drawings such as students, sunshine, books, or protective symbols.
- Highlight phrases like “stay away from drugs,” “stay alert,” and “grow up healthy” in bold.
Check these three points before finishing
- Make sure the language is suitable for children and not too heavy.
- Use clear sections instead of one long block of text.
- Include practical prevention ideas, not only slogans.
If you want to refine the layout, try another title style, or continue making a cleaner final page, you can also use the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program for your next step.