Choose a theme that children can actually use
A campus abuse-prevention handwritten newspaper should help students remember body boundaries, warning signs, refusal skills, and help channels. Instead of filling the page with slogans, divide the message into small sections so readers can understand it quickly.
You can use direct and simple titles such as “Learn to Protect Yourself,” “My Body Belongs to Me,” or “What Should I Do If Someone Makes Me Uncomfortable?” These titles are easy to read and fit a school safety theme well.
Four practical sections to include
1. Understanding body boundaries
Write that every person deserves respect, and any touch or behavior that causes fear, discomfort, or embarrassment should be taken seriously. No one should use jokes, gifts, or secrecy as an excuse for inappropriate behavior.
2. Warning signs to notice
- Someone stands too close on purpose and makes you uncomfortable
- Someone asks you to go alone to a hidden or quiet place
- Someone offers gifts or treats in exchange for secret behavior
- Someone says, “Don’t tell your parents or teachers”
- Someone sends messages, images, or words that feel scary or wrong
3. What to do right away
- Say “No” or “Stop” clearly
- Leave quickly and go to a bright, safe, public place
- Tell a trusted adult immediately
- Remember the time, place, and what happened
4. Who can help
You can list parents, class teachers, school staff, the school nurse, security staff, or another trusted adult. A short and clear help list makes the handwritten newspaper more practical.
Short lines that work well on a poster
Poster text should be brief and strong. These lines are suitable for direct use or light editing:
- My body belongs to me, and I can refuse uncomfortable contact.
- Leave first, ask for help next, and never keep danger to yourself.
- Do not trust unsafe promises, and do not go to isolated places alone.
- If someone asks for secrecy, tell a parent or teacher quickly.
- Speaking up is an important way to protect yourself.
If you want a softer tone, add short closing lines such as “Learn safety, grow with confidence” or “Protect yourself and respect others.”
Keep the layout simple and readable
This topic works well with a top title and several content blocks underneath. Put the main message in the center, warning signs on one side, and help steps on the other. A clean layout makes the poster easier to read and remember.
Fresh colors such as blue, green, or orange are suitable. They keep the page bright without making the topic feel too heavy. Simple borders can separate different sections clearly.
Use careful, age-appropriate wording
This is a serious topic, but the handwritten newspaper should still be suitable for children. Avoid graphic details or frightening language. Focus on practical actions like notice, refuse, leave, and seek help.
Parents and teachers can encourage children to rewrite the ideas in their own words so the final poster feels natural. If you want to improve the layout, add more sections, or continue designing the page, you can refine it further in the WeChat mini program with Zhihui Shouchaobao.