I have used students to help me out for years. I use them to staff the Santa Store, to Deck The Halls, Field Day, Book Fair, Tutoring, etc. I also utilize the high school students who need community service hours.
You do have to make your intentions, what you expect, student eligibility requirements, etc. very clear from the get go. I use only 5th and 6th grade students, students who are carrying at least an A/B average, students whose work is completely up to date, etc. There is also a standing rule that there are no warnings for misbehavior. If they misbehave, they are sent back to class and never asked to help again. That is not to say that if they make a mistake, only if they misbehave.
There is usually one or two classroom teachers who use the experience as a class lesson. We have one 5th grade teacher who used our Santa Shop as a lesson in future careers (sales, cashiers, child development, being the owner vs the employee, volunteer, etc.). That one classroom worked in the shop all month. For their work, they received their own purchases at cost. If they made no purchases, they received a cool ball (hard to explain what it is/was, but it was cool and everyone wanted one). They had a lot of fun, learned a lot of various lessons, and we had a well staffed Santa Shop. Talk about a win-win situation!
[ 05-14-2004, 11:07 AM: Message edited by: TheMetzyMom ]