It' a flat display, you don't need a lot of Depth-of-field, you can use a pretty wide aperture.
It's a static display - nothing should be moving, you shouldn't need a particularly high shutter speed.
And using a tripod - you aught be able to use as low a ISO as you like and get higher exposure from a longer shutter, if needed.
My worry, would be available lighting.. if you are photographing photographs, good chance they are pretty glossy; art-work? Similarly.
I would NOT repeat NOT want to use flash! To avoid harsh reflections of the subject.
Typical school corridor? Available lighting is either going to be window-light ad or over-head fluorescent strip lighting.
Overhead strip lighting? Not nice, and apart from green-cast on the white-balance, is also likely to be some-what harsh, and give hot spots on more reflective bits of the display.
Window-lighting, is likely to be far more natural, and neutral, and even over the subject.. but depends on the windows...
Getting all 'technical' about it, ideal would probably be three or four 'soft-boxes' set up to chuck an even light over the whole display.... I would be thinking angle-poise desk lamps, and gaffer taping card-board boxes with white T-shirts stretched over them, over the lamp-shade!
THEN, I might start to think about the camera.. and being 'square' to the subject, and framing for the whole display.....
A 50mm lens on a crop sensor body, is probably NOT going to have a wide enough angle-of-view, at any short range permitted in a typical corridor, nor would the longer focal lengths of the kit 18-55!!
18mm focal length on my 'kit' 18-55 gives me about 3m of wall in the frame, at a range of 2m... so in a 2m wide corridor, you aren't going to have much space to get behind the camera, if the displays are more than maybe 1.5m wide.
This could be a job that really begs an ultra-wide lens, something down in the 10-20mm range, if space is that restrictive.
OR you could have to photograph in sections and stitch them in Panorama software - there's always more than one way to skin a cat!
Question to the Head, would be what do they want to use the photo's for? How 'good' do they need to be? How big are they ever going to be displayed?
But my concerns would be first the lighting, then the access, and then controlling perspective, and keeping the camera square to the subject, in both planes...
Flash and hand-holding would not be considered in anything but the last resort!