The RenewaNation Review 2018 Volume 10 Issue 2 | Page 33

applicable to Christian schools. 2 First, vision should motivate and inspire. Vision state- ments need to set the bar for optimum performance and goals within the school. Second, vision should push staff and faculty to action. Your staff and faculty should be bought into and invested in your school’s why in order to pursue the vision and foster an environment that encour- ages their involvement. Third, vision should operate on multiple levels. Vision state- ments need to be applicable to all levels and job functions within the school. Finally, vision statements should be short and to the point. Perhaps the most pivotal piece of creat- ing a vision statement is that if staff and faculty have difficulty remembering the vision statement, then the vision does not exist within their practice. In order for successful vision and mission fulfillment to take place, all employees should have ownership of each. The Journey for a Christian education. For this reason, the pursuit of a school’s vision and mission fulfillment is even more crucial and bears even more weight than any other.   Before a Christian school can set about on the road to success, a vision must first be created. Why does it exist, and where does it seek to be in the future? A vision statement is often synonymous with a purpose statement. With the end in mind, the road on which all decisions are made becomes a little straighter.   Shockley-Zalabak, Morreale, and Hackman identified four core purposes for vision statements that are certainly The journey of pursuing vision fulfillment begins with the day-to-day practices and operations. Mission state- ments are typically longer in nature but are the practical, daily ways staff, faculty, and administration pursue fulfill- ing the vision in and out of the classroom. When hiring and retaining staff and faculty, leadership must seek individuals who desire to be mission fit and desire to put the mission into practice each day in whatever capacity they serve.   One of the biggest pieces, and one often forgotten in the consideration or assessment of vision and mission fulfill- ment, is the culture and climate that exists. Like vision and mission, culture and climate are often mistakenly used interchangeably. The culture of a school is the why of an organization. It is simply the personality of a school and the “unwritten mission statement.”  3 The climate is what the school does and can be referred to as the attitude of 33