Build the theme around festivals by the rivers
A good way to make this handwritten newspaper feel focused is to turn the broad river-culture topic into traditional festivals in the Yellow River and Yangtze River regions. This lets students write familiar content while still showing regional culture and comparison.
You may use a title like “Festivals Along China’s Great Rivers” or “Traditional Celebrations from the Yellow River to the Yangtze.” A short subtitle can explain that festivals carry memory, customs, and cultural inheritance.
Choose four practical content blocks
Festival basics
Pick two to four festivals and briefly introduce their dates, meanings, and symbols. Keep the language short and suitable for primary school readers.
Yellow River festival impressions
This part can mention lively temple fairs, drums, paper-cutting, flower buns, and a strong rustic atmosphere that reflects the character of many northern communities.
Yangtze River customs
Here students can write about dragon boat races, zongzi, mugwort, lantern fairs, and water-town celebrations, showing the flexible and colorful nature of southern river life.
What I discovered
End with a short reflection: although the celebration styles are different, both river regions express hopes for reunion, safety, happiness, and a better life.
Useful lines to place in the newspaper
- The Yellow River and the Yangtze River nourish not only land, but also rich festival culture.
- Traditional festivals are an important part of Chinese cultural memory.
- Festival customs show the wisdom and emotions of everyday people.
- Different regions celebrate in different ways, but they share the same love for tradition.
- From north to south, river culture makes Chinese festivals more colorful.
These sentences work well as side notes, small captions, or a closing paragraph.
Try a river-shaped page layout
Instead of a plain two-column page, draw a flowing river line through the center. Put Yellow River content on one side and Yangtze River content on the other. Add icons such as lanterns, dragon boats, moons, drums, or festive clouds to connect the sections.
For color choices, use warm yellow for the Yellow River, blue for the Yangtze, and red for holiday spirit. Keep the title bold and the body text neat so the page looks bright but readable.
A simple comparison makes the page stronger
This topic becomes more interesting when students include a small contrast section. For example, the Yellow River region may feel more bold and earthy, while the Yangtze River region often suggests water-town beauty and dynamic boat customs. A few well-chosen comparisons can make the work look thoughtful without becoming too difficult.
You can also add a mini-box called “Same and Different” to summarize common values and regional traits.
Finish with a cultural message
A short ending can say that the traditional festivals of the Yellow River and Yangtze River regions connect the past and the present. Learning these customs means understanding not only celebration, but also the warmth of Chinese culture.
If you want to continue polishing the layout and turn your ideas into a cleaner final page, you can continue making your work in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program.