Campus First Aid and Life Education Handwritten Newspaper

How to Make a Campus Heatstroke and Fainting First-Aid Handwritten Newspaper

This topic focuses on heatstroke and fainting on campus, offering first-aid points, life-education phrases, section ideas, and layout suggestions for a handwritten newspaper. It highlights asking for help, avoiding crowds, and responding safely, making it useful for students, parents, and teachers.

Direct Answer

A campus heatstroke and fainting first-aid handwritten newspaper can focus on four ideas: notice warning signs, ask for help, respond safely, and do not crowd around. Include signs such as dizziness, thirst, heavy sweating, and pale face, plus actions like calling a teacher, moving to shade, keeping space, and avoiding forced water or medicine. A flowchart layout with playground, shade, water bottle, and school health kit drawings works well.

Start with one clear safety message

This poster-style handwritten newspaper can focus on the idea of “ask for help early and keep space around a classmate in trouble”. Heatstroke and fainting may happen during PE class, sports day, lunch lines, or in a hot classroom. The page should help students understand two key actions: tell a teacher quickly and avoid crowding around the person.

First-aid points to include on the page

What to do for possible heatstroke

  • Help the student move to a cool, shaded, and well-ventilated place.
  • Loosen tight collars or clothing carefully to help the body cool down.
  • If the student is awake and able to drink, offer small sips of water. Do not force water if the student is vomiting, unconscious, or having convulsions.
  • If the situation looks serious, ask a teacher to call emergency services and contact the family.

What to do when someone faints

  • Do not crowd around the student. Leave fresh air and enough space.
  • Let a teacher decide whether the student should lie down and rest. Do not pull, shake, or move the person casually.
  • Observe breathing, skin color, and response, and tell the teacher what happened before the fainting.
  • Without professional guidance, do not give medicine, force food or water, or make the student stand up immediately.

Add a warm life-education corner

Besides first-aid steps, the handwritten newspaper can include a caring message about respect for life. Try three small sections: “I can ask for help,” “I do not crowd around,” and “I protect myself.”

  • I can ask for help: Feeling unwell is not something to hide. Tell a teacher early.
  • I do not crowd around: Keep the way clear so adults can help quickly.
  • I protect myself: Warm up before exercise, avoid long sun exposure, and bring a water bottle.

Turn the layout into a safety route

A left-to-right flowchart works well: notice warning signs, call a teacher, move to a cool place, observe carefully, and wait for help. Add simple drawings such as a playground, shade trees, a water bottle, a school health kit, and reminder signs. Light blue, green, and orange make the page fresh and easy to read.

  1. Put the title at the top with small drawings of the sun, clouds, and the school building.
  2. Use the left side for “warning signs,” such as dizziness, thirst, heavy sweating, and weakness.
  3. Use the right side for “fainting response,” stressing no crowding, no random moving, and asking a teacher.
  4. Leave the bottom for a safety slogan, such as “Knowing how to ask for help protects life.”

Short sentences for copying

  • Do not push through discomfort in hot weather; report dizziness early.
  • When a classmate suddenly falls, the first step is to call a teacher.
  • Do not crowd around an emergency scene; keeping a clear path is real help.
  • Drink water, rest well, and stay away from strong sun during outdoor activities.
  • Respecting life begins with one correct call for help.

A practical making tip

Before drawing the final version, divide a draft page into four parts: signs, actions, things not to do, and life messages. Parents and teachers can also continue in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program to choose a layout and adjust the wording, making the campus safety theme clearer and easier to finish.

FAQ

What sections can I use for this handwritten newspaper?

Good sections include “Heatstroke warning signs,” “What to do when someone faints,” “Things not to do,” and “Life education slogans.” This gives the page both practical safety knowledge and a caring message for school life.

What pictures are suitable for this topic?

You can draw a playground, sun, shade trees, water bottle, school health kit, teacher, and students helping each other. Keep the style bright and calm rather than scary, so it fits a primary school safety theme.

What wrong actions should the poster remind students to avoid?

Useful reminders include: do not crowd around, do not move the person casually, do not give medicine at random, and do not force the student to stand up. These points guide students to call a teacher and keep the area clear.

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