Start with a clear and child-friendly theme
If you are not sure how to begin, turn the topic into one simple sentence, such as “Know the Renminbi, care for every banknote” or “Use money politely, start with me”. A clear theme makes the title, drawings, and text easier to organize.
This kind of poster does not need long explanations. The main goal is to help readers quickly understand what the poster is about and what habits it encourages.
Four practical sections that are easy to write
Section 1: Quick facts about the Renminbi
- The Renminbi is the legal currency of China.
- Different denominations are used in daily shopping and change.
- Currency is part of everyday public life, so it should be treated with care.
Section 2: Good habits for caring for money
- Do not draw or write on banknotes.
- Do not tear, crumple, or damage money on purpose.
- Keep notes as flat and clean as possible.
- Do not treat money like a toy.
Section 3: Simple anti-counterfeit awareness
Children do not need technical details. A poster can simply remind readers to look carefully at the note, check whether the design is clear, whether the colors look natural, and whether the important marks seem normal. The key message is look carefully and stay alert.
Section 4: A short civilized money-use message
- Caring for currency shows respect for public order.
- Damaged notes should be handled properly, not thrown around carelessly.
- Good habits with money begin with small daily actions.
Short text materials you can copy onto the poster
Short sentences save space and are easier for students to write neatly.
- The Renminbi is part of our daily life, so we should know it, value it, and protect it.
- Not writing on money and not damaging it are basic ways to care for currency.
- Careful observation helps us build awareness about suspicious notes.
- Caring for money begins with small actions.
If you still have blank space, you can end with a line like “Small banknotes, big lessons in civility.”
A layout idea that looks tidy without being difficult
To make the poster look nice, place a main title at the top or in the center and divide the rest into four content areas. This structure is stable and easy to arrange.
- Use red, orange, gold, or light beige as the main color palette.
- Make small titles with ribbon shapes, number labels, or rounded boxes.
- Decorate the border with waves, coin-like circles, stars, or simple lines.
- Keep each paragraph short and leave enough white space.
Small details that improve the final effect
You can draw a piggy bank, wallet, coins, or number symbols in the corners, but do not fill every area. Too many decorations can make the poster crowded.
If this is a class task or a family project, it helps to draft the outline first and then copy the final text neatly. To continue improving the layout, title style, and color matching, you can also use the Smart Handwritten Newspaper mini program for further poster making.