Build the theme around “play safely, play happily”
This hand-copied poster can focus on three ideas: no running after class, clear game boundaries, and friendly reminders among classmates. A good title could be “Safe Breaktime Games Without Running” or “Play Smart During Recess.” Instead of using only slogans, connect each safety rule with a game children can actually play.
Safe games to include on the poster
Quiet games
- String figures: Two students work together to make shapes. It is suitable for a classroom corner or another safe area.
- Finger exercises: This keeps hands and minds active without running or blocking others.
- Word chain: Students can use themes such as animals, seasons, or school items to make the game more interesting.
Light movement games
- Clapping rhyme: Two students follow a rhythm together. Remind them not to push or kick.
- Simple hopscotch: If the school allows it in a marked area, students should take turns and wait in line.
- Find a partner: Students follow a spoken cue to find classmates, but movements should stay small and calm.
Write safety tips as a traffic light
A “recess safety traffic light” section can make the rules easy to read.
- Green light: Walk slowly, speak softly, take turns, and be kind.
- Yellow light: Wait when the area is crowded, check your surroundings before playing, and stop when something feels unsafe.
- Red light: No chasing, pushing, playing on stairs, or joking with sharp objects.
Short lines such as “Ten minutes of recess, safety comes first” and “Walk slowly, play kindly” are suitable for the poster.
Turn the page into a recess safety map
For a more creative layout, design the whole page as a “safe recess map.” Draw a school building or playground area in the center, then place four sections around it: safe game ideas, dangerous actions to avoid, polite reminders, and my recess promise. Use light blue, green, and yellow to keep the page bright and clean.
Useful drawings include schoolbags, a bell, hopscotch squares, smiling classmates, and traffic light signs. Show students walking calmly, lining up, or playing cooperatively instead of running and chasing.
End with a personal recess promise
The final part can be a short promise to make the poster meaningful:
- I will tidy my desk before leaving my seat.
- I will choose safe and polite games.
- I will not run or push in corridors, stairways, or doorways.
- I will kindly remind classmates to stop unsafe actions.
If you want to arrange the title, sections, and text into a neat poster layout more quickly, you can continue creating it in the 智慧手抄报 WeChat mini program.