This is a compound light microscope, not a dissecting scope, right?
Really, to truly appreciate the coral polyp, a dissecting scope is best, in my opinion. Otherwise, you just see a dark blob. With a dissecting scope, just take a few polyps - two to three, maybe four, and you will be able to see the zoox speckles within the tissue easily. And, zoox won't just be in the polyps itself but in the surrounding base flesh as well. If you are still and don't rattle the table too much, the polyp(s) will emerge enough to see visible zoox.
But, a REALLY good candidate for this is P. damicornis. I have used this coral MANY times for demos, and it is fabulous. The polyps are always out, zoox speckles everywhere. And, if you have a large chunk of it, you can put it in a cup over night and see if it has released any planula larvae - they look like flatworms. If you have enough time, give it a frag plug that has a biofilm on it, and the larvae will metamorphose into a primary polyp on the frag plug. Then, you can have the adult colony there and the primary polyp, and show kids how corals start out life as a tiny pinhead, then grow to HUGE colonies.
Really want to razzle-dazzle 'em, build a small black box, put the adult P. dam in water in the box and have people see the fluorescence with Night Sea:
Night Sea
If you are set on the single polyp, you can use a diamond wheel dremmel to get the single polyp with corallite extracted, then use fine-tipped tweezers (I recommend two) to gently crack open the corallite, exposing the polyp. If you are careful, you might be able to open up half the polyp and expose the mesenteries too.
If you are using a compound light microscope, here is another fun demo. Get some aptasia - they are always around...

Have a cup for holding your aptasia and get a sharp razor blade and cut a tentacle from an adult and place the tentacle on your microscope slide - well slides are good for this. Then, take a drop of DI water and drip it on the tentacle. Look through the scope (200x should be plenty for this), and you should see the nematocyst threads discharge from the cnidocytes. It's amazing the speed at which they come bursting out of the capsule, and the are LONG. It's hard to believe that that whole thread is coiled up in that tiny cell. Really, I have to focus on one spot and wait for a thread to appear. If I am scanning around, I'll miss the actual discharge.
What happens - explanation. This demonstrates diffusion by osmosis. Water is going to move to the area of higher solute concentration, in this case to the inside of the cells, passively across the membranes. As the intracellular pressure rises, the cnidocyte cap bursts, expelling the nematocyst thread.
Eventually, you'll need a new tentacle.
Have fun.
Cheers
Mike