My six-year old daughter went out hunting w/me and we managed to bag a cow elk. She goes where I go.
She grabbed a rear hock and held it over so that I could cut around the vulva and start the cut to empty the intestines out. If she had not been there I would have used a rope, but it was mucho easier with her giving me a hand.
Once my buddies got there with the tarps and game bags they took over and she became pretty much a spectator, but the part she played certainly was helpful.
Of course w/kids there are always little things that "get a bit sideways," she left the case to her 6x30 Leupold Yosemite Binocular and her Hoochie Mama elk caller laying in the field but a buddy went up a couple days later and was able to backtrack where we had been hunting and he fetched them home for her.
There have been a couple times when kids have got a coyote set busted or someo sameo w/a great deer stand that we were working a trophy blacktail from. So what? Tomorrow's another day, we will try again tomorrow. A young kid really doesn't care all that much if you bring home a nice mature blacktail buck or a fork-horn. As long as you are not a jerk about it, nobody will ever know the difference and unless you have your head firmly implanted it won't make that much difference to your experience either.
When she was four we were at Northwest Trek and people were commenting on the Canadian geese, she said they sure are beautiful......... and after you pull all their feathers out they have meat inside. My wife was sitting there kinda' in a state of shock after that remark. But my daughter didn't even notice that what she had said off the cuff left a pretty big impression on the naturalist who was on the tram w/us that day. she was just taking part in the conversation going on and after the tram tour he complemented me on her familiarity with the wildlife and the habitat when he asked questions and when she commented about the geese having meat in side it wasn't the least bit controversial to her, she was just talking about Canadian geese.