Church members have a wide range of skills and expertise for schools to draw on. Schools have always made use of church volunteers to support a whole range of extra-curricular activities. These might range from accompanying a ski holiday or other residential trip, help with Duke of Edinburgh trips and training, offering to lead clubs such as football, computing, cookery, and supporting drama and music productions with stage management, props, scenery painting, music or makeup. Activity weeks during the school holidays are another possibility. They would obviously be willing to offer specific help with Christian clubs at lunch time or after school if invited by the school to do so.
In order to deliver the 'out-of-hours' provision, schools need to work with the voluntary sector, and this of course includes the church and Christian organisations such as those employing Christian schools workers. If your school is managing the 'out-of-hours' provision yourself, you may be glad of offers of help from church groups or Christian schools workers at either end of the day.
Churches already run Scouts, Guides, Brownies, Beavers, Cubs, Rainbows or Girls and Boys Brigade groups. Many Baptist churches run Arise groups. You might like to consider linking your school with such a church-run group as part of your 'out-of-hours' provision. Suitably qualified and CRB checked church volunteers can be invited to help staff the breakfast club, help with after-school activities or to run clubs after school as part of the 'out-of-hours' provision.
As part of the extended services offered by a school, OfSTED will inspect what happens 'out of hours' and there is a requirement that pupils' spiritual development should be included within these activities to some degree. By getting churches involved with such activities, it can help your school deliver an additional spiritual dimension to what you otherwise offer.