Campus First Aid Skills and Injury Response Handwritten Newspaper

What to Write for a Poster About Something in the Eye

This article helps students, parents, and teachers create a hand-copied poster about eye foreign object first aid at school. It includes safe response steps, warning points, short slogans, writing materials, and layout ideas for a clear and practical campus safety poster.

Direct Answer

For a hand-copied poster about what to do when something gets in your eye, focus on four key points: do not rub the eye, ask an adult for help, rinse gently with clean water when guided, and seek medical help if pain or blurred vision continues. The poster can include first-aid steps, wrong actions to avoid, eye-care slogans, and a simple school scene illustration.

Build the poster around a simple safety message

A hand-copied poster about “what to do when something gets in your eye” should focus on a clear campus first-aid idea: do not rub, stay calm, and ask for help. It is suitable for school safety lessons, first-aid corners, or health education displays.

A good opening sentence can be: Our eyes help us see the world. If dust, paper scraps, or a small insect gets into the eye at school, we should protect the eye first and ask a teacher, school nurse, or parent for help.

First-aid steps to write on the poster

  1. Step 1: Stop rubbing the eye. Rubbing may scratch the surface of the eye or push the object deeper.
  2. Step 2: Blink gently. For tiny dust, tears may help wash it out naturally.
  3. Step 3: Tell an adult immediately. Do not try to pick the object out by yourself.
  4. Step 4: Rinse with clean water when guided. A teacher or school nurse can help decide whether gentle rinsing is suitable.
  5. Step 5: Get medical help if symptoms continue. Pain, blurred vision, heavy tearing, or an object that cannot be removed should not be ignored.

Add a bright “Do Not Do This” warning box

A warning box can make the poster more useful and easier to remember. Use short sentences and a red border to show caution.

  • Do not rub your eye again and again.
  • Do not use pencils, rulers, paper corners, or other sharp items.
  • Do not use unknown eye drops casually.
  • Do not hide the problem from teachers or parents.
  • Do not keep running or playing if the eye hurts.

Ready-to-use writing materials

Safety slogans

  • If something gets in your eye, do not rub and do not panic.
  • Protect small eyes with big care.
  • Dust in the eye? Stop, blink, and ask for help.

Mini knowledge card

When a foreign object enters the eye, the most important thing is to protect the eye surface. Tiny dust may be washed away by tears, but pain, redness, constant tearing, or unclear vision means an adult should be told right away and medical help may be needed.

Layout ideas for a school-style poster

Divide the page into four areas: a large title with an eye illustration, a step-by-step first-aid card, a warning box for wrong actions, and a slogan corner. Blue and green can make the page look clean and safe, while red can be used only for warnings.

Small drawings can include water drops, glasses, a first-aid kit, a teacher helping a student, and a “no rubbing” sign. Keep the pictures friendly and simple, and avoid scary injury scenes.

Finish the design with a clearer structure

If you want a neater page, you can continue making the poster in the Smart Handwritten Poster WeChat mini program. Arrange the title, step cards, warning box, and slogan area clearly so readers can remember the key action at a glance.

FAQ

What title works well for this poster topic?

Good titles include “Do Not Rub Your Eye,” “What to Do When Something Gets in Your Eye,” and “Campus Eye Safety First Aid.” Choose a title that is short, clear, and easy for students to understand.

What should be the main content of the poster?

The most important content is the safe response: stop rubbing, blink gently, tell a teacher or parent, rinse with clean water only when guided, and get medical help if pain or blurred vision continues.

What pictures can I draw for this topic?

You can draw a big eye, water drops, a first-aid kit, a teacher helping a student, and a warning sign that says not to rub the eye. Keep the drawings bright and friendly.

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