Start with campus life to make the topic easier
Many students find the topic too broad at first. A better idea is to place energy saving and emission reduction inside school life. Classrooms, hallways, the dining hall, the playground, and the reading corner all offer simple and realistic writing points.
You can shape the whole page around a theme like Build a Green Campus. Once the topic is tied to daily school life, the content becomes clearer and easier to arrange.
Useful sections to include on the page
Section 1: Energy-saving moments on campus
- Use fewer lights when daylight is enough
- Turn off lights and fans before leaving the classroom
- Close the tap tightly after washing hands
- Use both sides of paper whenever possible
Section 2: Actions I can take
- Walk or ride a bike to school
- Bring a reusable water bottle
- Sort trash correctly
- Finish meals and avoid wasting food
Section 3: Small green facts
- Energy saving means reducing unnecessary use of electricity, water, and paper
- Emission reduction means cutting waste and pollution
- Low-carbon living begins with everyday habits
Section 4: Slogan corner
- Save one unit of electricity, brighten a greener campus
- Treasure every drop of water
- Sort waste, improve the environment
- Choose green travel for a bluer sky
Section 5: My student pledge
End with a few simple lines: I will start with turning off lights, saving water, sorting waste, using less paper, and choosing low-carbon travel to help build a cleaner campus.
Short writing material you can use directly
School is where we learn and grow every day. Protecting the campus environment means protecting our shared home. Energy saving and emission reduction are not difficult tasks. They appear in a light turned off in time, a sheet of paper used on both sides, and a meal finished without waste. When everyone takes action, a greener campus becomes possible.
Green living is not only a slogan. It is a good habit. We can begin with small things, learn to save resources, care for the environment, and make our school cleaner, brighter, and more beautiful through our own actions.
Try a central title with surrounding content blocks
This theme works well with a large title at the top center, such as Energy Saving on Campus or Green Campus Starts with Me. In the middle, draw the Earth, a young tree, or a recycling sign, then place the content blocks around it.
- Top left for energy-saving observations
- Top right for green facts
- Bottom left for personal actions
- Bottom right for slogans or a pledge
If your text is short, leave some breathing space and add simple decorations like leaves, clouds, sunshine, or grass borders.
Color and decoration tips
Green and blue are the best main colors because they feel fresh and eco-friendly. Yellow can be used as an accent to make titles stand out. Decorations do not need to be complicated. Small icons such as light bulbs, water drops, bicycles, recycling bins, and leaf borders are enough.
- Use dark green or blue-green for titles
- Highlight key words with a little yellow or orange
- Keep borders light so they do not overpower the text
- Add one small icon to each section for clarity
How to finish the poster well
Before you finish, check three things: whether the theme is clear, whether the sections are organized, and whether the handwriting is neat. Then add a strong closing sentence such as Start today, start with me.
If you already have your ideas and text, you can continue refining the layout, colors, and title styles in the Zhihui Shouchao Bao WeChat mini program to make the final handwritten newspaper more complete and attractive.