"From the first moment that a student sets foot in a Catholic school, he or she ought to have the impression of entering a new environment, one illumined by the light of faith, and having its own unique characteristics. The Council summed this up by speaking of an environment permeated with the Gospel spirit of love and freedom."
- The Congregation for Catholic Education, The Religious Dimension of Education in a Catholic School, para. 25, 1988
At the risk of giving sports too much credit, I offer the following quote from Riley Leonard, the University of Notre Dame's starting quarterback, for our consideration as Catholic school leaders.
After Notre Dame's win in the Orange Bowl last Thursday against Penn State, Leonard preached:
"What I think the country is learning about our program, I think the biggest thing is just culture wins. You see a bunch of talented guys across our locker room, but you can see that anywhere in the country. I think at the end of the day it's which guys are putting their bodies on the line and doing everything they can for the man next to them. Nobody is thinking about draft stocks or next year or anything like that, any type of individual glory. We're all thinking about the man beside us. I think we kind of proved throughout the season.”
Not only did Riley propose the reason for the team's success - that culture wins - but he described the type of culture that has the Fighting Irish in a position to win it's first national championship in football since 1988:
- The team and its success is more important than individual acclaim.
- People are more important than points, playing time, percentages, or products.
- Hard work beats talent.
Leonard also - another component of the team and university's culture - emphasized faith in Jesus Christ, ending his interviews on Thursday as he has throughout the season with the words, "Jesus bless."
Yes, one could attribute all of these polished and feel-good sound bytes to a competent public relations team and strong training sessions for a 20-something year-old college student who will have a microphone and camera in his face at the conclusion of just about every game. The fact that this type of advanced preparation undoubtedly takes place stands as another facet of a culture that wins: Excellence happens on purpose.
In a study of corporate culture and its impact on revenues, Kotter and Heskett (1992) found that over an 11 year period companies with strong cultures "grew their stock prices by 901 percent versus 74 percent...and improved their net incomes by 756 percent versus 1 percent" (p. 11).
Culture wins.
The same holds true for our schools. Schools with strong cultures will yield significantly higher academic achievement, improved behavior, higher employee satisfaction. The normative culture of a school - the ways we do things here - impacts academic performance, social behavior, and moral behavior (Hallinan, 2005). A strong culture acts as one of four main levers identified as the way that principals have a positive impact on schools (Grissom, Egalite, Lindsay, 2021). The other three include: high-leverage instructional activities, collaboration, and management of personnel and resources.
Again, culture wins.
In sports. In business. In schools. In Catholic schools.
Culture wins.