Start with a clear theme: learning to protect yourself
This kind of handwritten newspaper works best when it connects three ideas together: anti-bullying, anti-scam awareness, and self-protection. A strong title could be “How to Stay Safe at School and Online” or “Say No, Ask for Help, Protect Yourself.”
To make the page easy for students to complete, do not fill it with long paragraphs. Break the content into short tips, mini checklists, and action steps. That makes the newspaper easier to copy, read, and decorate.
A simple layout that explains three key topics
- Center title area: place the main title in large letters so the theme stands out first.
- Left section: write about common forms of bullying, such as mocking, name-calling, exclusion, pushing, threats, or hurtful online comments.
- Right section: list scam warnings, including suspicious links, fake prizes, game top-up tricks, QR code traps, and strangers asking for private information.
- Bottom section: create a “What should I do?” box with clear steps for self-protection.
- Corner decorations: add shields, warning signs, speech bubbles, schoolbags, or phones for a neat safety theme.
Useful text students can write directly
Anti-bullying lines
- Being bullied is not your fault. Tell a teacher or parent in time.
- Do not laugh along, spread rumors, or stand by without helping.
- If someone threatens, pushes, or takes your things, leave and ask for help at once.
- Online insults, exclusion, and rumor spreading are also bullying.
Anti-scam lines
- Do not click unknown links or scan random codes.
- Be careful with any message asking for money, passwords, or verification codes.
- Free gifts, game rewards, and account trades may hide scams.
- Do not share your name, address, school, or phone number with strangers.
Self-protection slogans
- Stay alert and protect your privacy.
- Do not panic. Find a trusted adult first.
- Learn to refuse and ask for help bravely.
- Leave danger quickly and keep evidence when needed.
The most practical part: write down what to do
A good handwritten newspaper should not stop at general advice. Add a section called “If this happens to me” to make it more helpful.
- If someone bullies me at school: leave the situation and go to a safe place such as a teacher’s office.
- If someone insults me online: do not argue back; save screenshots and tell parents or teachers.
- If a stranger asks for my information: do not answer or share anything before checking with an adult.
- If someone asks for money or a code: stop immediately and verify first.
This kind of action list is easy to organize with numbers, arrows, or small note boxes.
Keep the design clean and easy to read
Use clear and bright colors such as blue, green, and orange. You can add a little red for warning symbols. Anti-bullying parts can feel warm and supportive, while anti-scam sections can look alert and focused.
Do not overcrowd the page. A little blank space makes the newspaper look cleaner. Speech bubbles like “I will say no,” “I will ask for help,” and “I will not trust strange messages” can make the page feel active and student-friendly.
A natural ending for the page
You can finish with a short message such as Say no to bullying, stay away from scams, and learn to protect yourself every day. If students or parents want more title ideas, layout options, or ready-to-use text for a school safety handwritten newspaper, they can continue creating in the Smart Handwritten Newspaper WeChat mini program.