Build the theme around tea manners, not just tea facts
For this kind of handwritten newspaper, it is better to focus on tea etiquette instead of listing many tea types. A title like “Tea Etiquette for Guests,” “Courtesy in Chinese Tea Culture,” or “What a Cup of Tea Teaches Us” makes the page feel clearer and more practical for schoolwork.
If the page is small, keep the message simple with three ideas: respect elders, welcome guests, and show good manners. This helps students stay on topic.
Useful sections you can place on the page
- Tea Manners Corner: basic rules such as offering tea with both hands, serving guests first, and speaking politely.
- Quick Facts About Tea Culture: short notes on tea in daily life and the tradition of welcoming visitors with tea.
- At Home and With Family: what to remember when serving tea to grandparents or guests.
- Manners Beyond Tea: connect tea etiquette with everyday behavior like respect, patience, and kindness.
This mix gives the page both cultural value and practical manners education.
Short text materials students can use directly
Simple slogan ideas
- A cup of tea carries respect.
- Serving tea with both hands shows sincerity.
- Guests first, courtesy always.
- Tea culture begins with good manners.
Short paragraph sample
In Chinese tradition, tea is more than a drink. It is also a warm and polite way to welcome others. When people serve tea, they show respect, kindness, and care. Small details such as steady hands, gentle words, and serving elders first all reflect good manners.
For primary school students, this topic can be understood as a lesson in daily courtesy. Tea culture is not only about history, but also about how we treat people around us.
How to arrange the layout
A good layout is big title in the center, side columns for content, and a small tips area at the bottom. Put the main title in the middle, then decorate the page with teapots, teacups, tea leaves, and soft steam lines.
- Use green, light brown, or beige for a calm tea-inspired style.
- Keep subtitles neat and easy to read.
- Draw simple teaware or leaf borders instead of crowded pictures.
- Highlight key sentences so the page does not look too text-heavy.
Ways to make the newspaper feel more lively
You can add a small situation box, such as “How should I serve tea to a guest?” or “What should I remember when bringing tea to grandparents?” This makes the work more personal and easier for teachers to appreciate.
Students can also write one reflection sentence, such as “I learned that etiquette means respecting others in small actions.” If you want to continue polishing the layout and content, you can also explore more handwritten newspaper ideas in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program.