Start with a clear focus: how White Dew connects to corn
This handwritten newspaper works best when it centers on the White Dew solar term, autumn farm work, and basic corn knowledge. Around White Dew, the weather turns cooler and the temperature gap between day and night becomes more obvious. In many places, autumn crops move closer to maturity, and corn is one of the easiest crops for children to observe and describe. The key idea is simple: seasonal changes affect farming, and crops grow with the rhythm of the solar terms.
Easy section ideas for the page
- Solar Term Snapshot: introduce when White Dew arrives, its weather features, and why it has this name.
- The Growth of Corn: briefly explain sowing, sprouting, stem growth, tasseling, and ripening.
- Busy Fields in White Dew: mention crop care, checking kernels, and preparing for harvest.
- Autumn Fields in My Eyes: add one or two short lines describing the countryside in autumn.
- Little Reminders: include ideas like dressing warmly in the morning and evening, valuing food, and caring for farmland.
Text materials students can use directly
About the White Dew solar term
White Dew is an important solar term in autumn. At this time, the air becomes cooler, and tiny drops of dew often appear on leaves and grass in the early morning. That is why it is called White Dew. As autumn deepens, crops in the fields also begin to change.
White Dew and corn
Corn is a common autumn crop. Around White Dew, corn in many areas enters the grain-filling or ripening stage. The leaves gradually turn yellow, and the ears become fuller. Farmers watch the weather and crop condition carefully so they can manage the fields well and harvest at the right time.
Short lines about valuing food
- Every kernel of corn comes from hard work in the field.
- Learning solar terms helps us understand farming and respect harvests.
- From the field to the table, every grain deserves care.
How to make the page look more like an agriculture theme
Use golden yellow, light green, and sky blue as the main colors. For decoration, draw dew drops, corn ears, field borders, or soft autumn clouds. If the layout feels empty, add small fact bubbles such as “White Dew weather,” “Signs of ripe corn,” or “Autumn harvest words.” These details make the page both lively and organized.
Simple making tips for primary school students
- Write a large title and make the words “White Dew,” “corn,” and “harvest” stand out.
- Do not crowd the text. Short blocks of 3 to 5 lines are easier to read.
- The drawings do not need to be difficult. A corn ear, a few leaves, and several dew drops are enough.
- You can add a personal sentence such as “I learned that solar terms and crops are closely connected.”
- If you want to improve the layout or add more sections, you can continue creating in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program.