Start with a clear angle: earthquake drill safety at school
This poster topic works best when it focuses on a real school situation instead of broad earthquake facts. A school-based angle makes the content easier for children to understand and more useful for class activities.
You can add a short line under the main title, such as Learn earthquake safety and protect our campus, to make the page more focused.
Useful sections to include on the poster
- What to do when the alarm sounds: stay calm, take cover nearby, and protect your head.
- Classroom safety steps: drop down, cover yourself, and stay away from windows and hanging objects.
- How to evacuate safely: follow the teacher, use the planned route, and do not push or run.
- What happens in the safe area: line up, stay quiet, and wait for instructions.
If there is enough space, you can also add a small section about common mistakes during evacuation.
Short text materials students can copy
Keep the writing in short and simple sentences. For example: When an earthquake happens at school, the most important thing is to protect the head and stay calm. In the classroom, do not rush outside right away. Move quickly beside a strong desk, stay away from glass and tall cabinets, and wait until the shaking becomes weaker. Then evacuate in order under the teacher’s guidance. After reaching the playground or another open area, do not crowd, shout, or play around.
You can also add one sentence explaining why drills matter: regular earthquake drills help students respond more calmly and safely in a real emergency.
Layout ideas that look neat and practical
A good design is a large title in the center with sections on both sides. Put classroom safety on one side and evacuation steps on the other. At the bottom, add a small box for a safety slogan or a short reflection.
Colors like blue, green, and orange are bright and suitable for school safety themes. Decorative elements can include school buildings, arrows, helmets, notebooks, or safety signs.
Simple details that improve the final poster
- Use short headings instead of long paragraphs.
- Highlight key words such as protect your head, take cover, and evacuate in order.
- Add a small process chart so the logic is easy to follow.
- Finish with a personal line like “The more safety knowledge we learn, the calmer we can be in danger.”
If you want more title ideas, layouts, or ready-to-use poster text, you can continue making your work in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program.