Have a look at the current issue (winter 2005) of Keyboard Companion,
www.keyboardcompanion.com, for other tips:
- Keep the recital at 45 minutes max;
- Each child shall play his pieces at different times during the program;
- Each child shall play his pieces "should-sound-first-try" at least three weeks before the recital;
- Each child shall choose his own recital pieces;
- Do not make the students sit in the front row and go through the torture of not being able to move or speak while they wait their turn;
- Do not let a child play without warming up;
- Do teach recital deportment before the final dress rehersal;
- Play from memory should be left up to the student;
It's an interesting article that describes in detail all these points. The magazine itself is great, I love it, it has sections on Teachers/Parents/Student, Home Practice, Music Reading, Technique, Rhythm, Perspective in Pedagogy, Adult Piano Study, Repertoire and Performance, Technology, etc... It's geared for teachers.
It's a neat format, they submit a question to a panel of teachers and experts, for example, "What steps do you assign for the process of sight-reading", "How do you teach the rhythm challenges of the Chopin 'Prelude in E Minor'" and you read what these people have to say about it. Different opinions and points of view, great reading.
I have no links to the magazine by the way, I only subscribe to it. And I'm not a teacher I'm an 'Adult Student', but I get quite a bit out of it.