Christ is the foundation of the whole educational enterprise in a Catholic school. His revelation gives new meaning to life and helps man to direct his thought, action and will according to the Gospel, making the beatitudes his norm of life. The fact that in their own individual ways all members of the school community share this Christian vision, makes the school "Catholic"; principles of the Gospel in this manner become the educational norms since the school then has them as its internal motivation and final goal.
-Sacred Congregation for Catholic Education, 1977, para. 34
Maureen Hallinan (2005) posited that the normative culture of the school - the expected set of behaviors and operating procedures - has three main components: norms governing academic performance, norms for social behaviors, and norms regarding the morals and values of the school community.
As Catholic school leaders, we must accept and assume the responsibility for ensuring that the normative behavior in each of these three areas leads to excellence in academics, personal development, and faith formation.
More than just higher test scores and rigorous standards of conduct, our Catholic schools must design and implement ways of behaving and operating that allow all students to flourish holistically - mentally, personally, and spiritually.
From our admissions and enrollment management processes to our recruitment, hiring, and development of faculty and staff to our behavior systems to our expectations for teaching and learning, the norms within our Catholic schools must advance the school's mission. Anything that detracts, distracts, and/or destroys these mission-aligned efforts should be rooted out. Similarly, we must streamline all aspects of our schools so that they flow into the larger river of the school's mission.
In many ways, based upon the principles of the Gospel, these norms must be counter-cultural. Instead of discipline programs having a punitive flavor they must be geared toward formation.
Instead of elite institutions that only service those students and families with academic, behavioral, and economic strength, we must find ways to make our schools more accessible and affordable.
Guidance services must provide more than just academic and college/career support; they must include a vocational component - what is God calling you to do now and/or in the future?
Instead of just having large school-wide liturgical celebrations, we must also consider ways to circle smaller groups of students, teachers, and families - Jesus preached to thousands while discipling twelve-ish.
Instead of just saying that the school "is like a family" we can design intentional ways to support and strengthen the web of relationships between and among members of the school community.
We must honor more than just the top grades, athletic achievements, and college acceptances, finding ways to recognize and value service, improvement, and charity.
As stated by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops (the precursor to the current USCCB - United States Conference of Catholic Bishops) in 1972, "Community is at the heart of Christian education not simply as a concept to be taught but as a reality to be lived" (para. 23). These Gospel principles, therefore, become both the goal and the means by which the goal will be accomplished.
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Like the Sermon on the Plain we have heard proclaimed the last two weeks at Mass (2/16 and 2/23), our Catholic schools must be places that operationalize Christ's radical love and forgiveness, and life-giving grace and service.
When strategic Catholic school leaders lead with zeal, the devil isn't in the details; Christ is.
Let us strategically design policies, programs, and procedures that making Christ incarnate, so that our means justify, lead to, and double as our end: fullness of life through a relationship with Jesus Christ.