The 5/23/2014 post, “Vision – Mission – Goal – Target: A Travelogue,” gave a visual representation
of those elements. Today I will
discuss how they relate and impact your campus.
There are a
lot of people who believe that you must have a vision, then a mission, then a
goal, and then a target. That:
1 –
It is a backwards design process; and
2 – Without having all four, you are
lost.
Both of these beliefs are true
in some cases and false in other cases. In practical
terms, here is how it works in schools.
I can make significant and meaningful progress (in the short term)
without a vision and mission. The
reason for this is two-fold.
First, as a profession, educators want to do well by their students and
please their boss. We are good
people who crave order. Just doing
what comes naturally to us represents steps in the right direction. Second, the state mandates annual
performance goals that force us to adjust our practices towards meeting those
goals. We can argue how those
goals are measured, but bottom line we are expected to teach students to a
standard. As we teach to
standards, again we make steps in the right decision.
For those
that embrace their mandated goals, there is a need to create a slate of interim
targets that inform us in the pursuit of goal accomplishment. For many schools, this is all that is
needed in the short to midterm.
But once we build some competence we need more to keep us moving
forward. Just increasing the goal
is one way to do this. But that
doesn’t stoke the fire in the belly, at scale. Now is the time to build that vision and mission.
Which one you
build first is situational.
There are those who first define the mission of the organization and
then paint the picture of what the organization aspires to be. This is a viable solution. There are those who paint a picture of
the vision for organization and then define a mission that supports the
vision. This is a viable
solution.
What I think
is the important take away from this discussion is that what is most important
on any given day is a clear understanding of the goals and targets of the organization. What is important for the long-term
success of the organization is a clear understanding of the vision and mission. But this is a crawl, walk,
jog, run dynamic. If your team
isn’t ready to consider vision and mission yet, that doesn’t make you a bad
leader. But note that the longer it takes to get your team to that level of competence and consciousness does have a negative effect on progressing from survival mode to actualized mode.
Think. Work. Achieve.
Your turn...
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