Living the Mission:
Insights from Christian School Leaders Across Europe (Part 2)

At the International Educational Leaders Conference (IELC 2026), Christian school leaders from across Europe reflected on a simple but searching question: How closely do our daily practices reflect the mission we profess?

The survey results highlighted an encouraging reality—schools remain deeply committed to their Christian identity and purpose. Yet they also revealed a recurring leadership challenge: translating strong conviction into consistent practice.

As leaders reflected on the findings, three structural needs emerged that help explain why mission alignment can be difficult to sustain over time.

Three Structural Needs for Mission Alignment

The first is teacher formation.
Teachers shape the lived culture of a school more than any policy or strategic document. Yet many leaders acknowledged that educators often need greater support in understanding how to integrate biblical worldview into everyday teaching. Without intentional formation, mission alignment risks remaining aspirational rather than visible in classroom practice.

The second need is for leadership decision frameworks that consistently reference mission.
Strategic choices about staffing, finances, admissions, and discipline communicate priorities to the entire school community. When mission is clearly connected to these decisions, alignment becomes tangible. When it is not, schools can gradually drift into reactive patterns shaped more by pressure than by purpose.

Survey data 2026

Q5 - Our mission and foundational documents have been reviewed within the last 3-5 years with active leadership involvement.

Q6 - We have a defined process for reviewing our mission and vision that includes input from across the school community.

The third structural need is regular rhythms of mission review.
Many schools reported reviewing foundational documents within recent years, yet fewer had defined processes for doing so. Without intentional review, mission statements can move from guiding principles to background assumptions. Healthy leadership teams create space to reflect together, ensuring that current practices still reflect their founding vision.

Questions for Leadership Teams

These insights raise important questions for ongoing leadership reflection:

  • If someone observed our school for a week, what would they conclude our true priorities are?
  • How intentionally do we equip teachers to connect faith and learning in their classrooms?
  • When we make strategic or financial decisions, how clearly do we reference our mission?
  • When did our leadership team last review the practical implications of our mission together?

These questions are not designed to create pressure, but clarity. Alignment often begins with honest conversation.

Regional Insights Across Europe

Survey responses also revealed differences shaped by context. Schools in Western Europe frequently reported high clarity of mission but greater hesitation about consistent implementation, often influenced by financial pressures and increasingly secular environments. Emerging school movements in Spain, France, and the Balkans expressed strong enthusiasm and vision, while also acknowledging limited institutional infrastructure and heavy leadership workloads.

By contrast, many schools in Eastern Europe described stronger operational alignment between belief and practice, supported by traditions of collaboration, regional conferences, and shared resources developed over decades of rebuilding Christian education.

These differences highlight an important reality: mission alignment is not simply a theological issue—it is also an organizational one. Schools that strengthen collaboration across regions and develop intentional routines for reflection are better positioned to sustain their vision over time.

Looking Ahead

The survey findings suggest that reflection alone is not enough. Sustained mission alignment requires intentional systems that help schools move from conviction to consistent practice.

In the next and concluding article, we will explore practical pathways that leadership teams can use to build these rhythms into the life of their school—creating structures that support faithful stewardship, strategic clarity, and long-term impact.

SLC report 2025

Praise the Lord for His faithfulness and blessings poured out during the ACSI Student Leadership Conferences (SLC) this year! These gatherings brought together students and chaperones from 47 schools across Europe for a time of worship, discipleship, and leadership growth centered on the theme “Leaders Who Love Truth.”

Strengthening Critical Thinking

Christian schools are often intentional about teaching worldview and preparing students to engage with competing ideas. Yet the way we structure this engagement can either nurture deep critical thinking or unintentionally foster shallow habits of argument. Here are some practical tools to support critial thinking in the classroom.

Education as a Restoration of Hope

Today we turn to the good news: God’s plan of restoration through Christ. This is not only a personal hope but also a framework for how we think about education, leadership, and the shaping of society. How can we build meaningful outcomes into the process of teaching and learning which truly reflect the hope we have in Christ?

Recognizing the Problem of Sin

The foundational, yet often overlooked, reality is the way sin impacts both teaching and learning. As school leaders, we cannot view education merely as the transfer of knowledge or the development of skills. Education is always moral and spiritual, shaped either by truth that comes from God or by distortions introduced by sin.