Memes, GIFs, & Pics: 3 Tips To Liven Up Your School Newsletter

☕️ Busy? Here's the TL;DR

  1. 📖 Reading is dwindling so our comms need to work harder.
  2. 🌅 Visuals are a super effective way to catch people's attention
  3. 🕺🏻A GIF illustrates & animates your point. Find 'em at giphy.com
  4. 🗯 Use a meme to underscore your idea. Make them on this easy site.
  5. 📸 Photos will always 📈 your readership. Good ones at Unsplash.com!


It’s not something to celebrate, but the fact is, people are reading less than ever.

Any digital writer will tell you to avoid long blocks of text for that exact reason. Skim-ability is key. As educators, our instinct is to fight against reading slide, but as communicators, we gotta work with it.

So, let’s talk visuals.

GIFs will animate & illustrate your writing.


First off, hard g or soft? It’s pronounced jif, like the peanut butter.

See what I did there? I made the sentence come alive by finding a GIF to match my point. And it took 5 seconds. You can find a pre-made GIF on any topic or make one yourself, at giphy.com.

People love them and it dead stops the skimming eye.

Memes, for when you’re feeling witty.


A meme is a bite-sized piece of cultural info that spreads by imitation. Memes get their start from a specific image that captures the public’s eye (say, a US senator wearing huge mittens slumped in a lawn chair at the inauguration). Then, folks riff off it. You can make them here — it’s free, there are endless pics to choose from, and formatting is a breeze.

Here’s an example of a popular meme adapted for school comms:

Meme about digital newsletters vs. paper flyers in a backpack

Lastly, the picture that’s worth 1000 words

Add a picture to any block of text, 5x your readers. Create a zig-zag pattern with the picture placement, and you direct your reader’s eye. One good place to get free open-source photos, no account needed, is unsplash.com. You can search for any keywords, or even inspiring quotes.

Here’s that zig zag pattern:

Newsletter with a zig zag pattern of pictures & text


There you go: three fun ways to bring your school newsletter to life. Here’s a pre-formatted template to get you started!

p.s. 😎 are👌, too! 😉


Using Translation to Engage Families | School Newsletter Template
In the US, one in five students speaks a language other than English at home, which means there are A LOT of parents who are experiencing the disorientation that I’ve felt. This is why translation is so important – it opens the gate to families who aren’t comfortable yet with English.
5 Easy Ways to Get Parents to Read Your School Newsletter on Social Media
You’ve got important info to communicate with families, faculty, and community members. Here are five surefire ways to get readers to notice and engage with your content on social media.
Learning from Mistakes: 5 Lessons from School Newsletters That Didn’t Get Clicks
Small tweaks in your newsletter can lead to big results in your engagement numbers. Check out these 5 Do’s and Don’ts for school newsletters.