Welcome all !
Glad you enjoyed the tour.
boobooblueeyes
Sending kids, even teenagers, home with chicks is not a good idea. Despite the best intention of teachers and students, if the kids are not prepared for babies (what happens when the chick grows up?) nor have any experience with poultry, it is usually a disaster. Just like a kitten or a puppy, you have to be committed to the care of a BABY. The parents have to be committed along with the students.
Even if the students have the best set-up in the world and have studied extensively about Chickens, only one chick is not a good idea either. Chickens are social animals and do not thrive well without another chick for companionship.
How about keeping the five chicks in the classroom so that everyone can have a part in raising a "flock". They will have a better idea of how chickens interact with each other, etc. Have a contest about chick rearing and when summer break comes, let the most knowledgable student take the flock home for the summer (after inspecting where the chicks will reside). Next sememster, the students can design and build a coop for the school flock. A lot of schools do.
I never give hatching eggs to schools anymore. Most of the teachers are not as experienced as you, and have no idea what they are going to do with the birds when they hatch.