Saturday, August 15, 2015

Creating Classroom Mission Statements

I'm going to make a really bold statement: You should not create classroom rules.  I know some of you will stop reading right there, and that's ok.  But I truly believe that really well managed classrooms don't have rules.  What they do have are procedures and mission statements.  Rules can be broken, but procedures are just how things are done.  With a mission statement students can actually reflect on whether or not their actions are in line with the class mission.  I have used mission statements in my class for the past four years.  I love creating them with students as a first week activity because it unites us around a common purpose.  It also gets kids thinking that school's purpose is more than just learning.  Are you on board?  Then keep reading for step by step instructions on what I feel is the best way to create a mission statement with your students.

Step One: Define what a mission statement is

I use this definition, "A mission statement is a sentence or short paragraph written by a group of people, a company, or a business that explains their purpose, values, identity, and goals."

We then discuss what purpose, values, identity, and goals mean as a class.

Step Two: Play a guessing game with some existing mission statements

I will put up mission statements from a few well known companies and have students try to guess which companies they are from.  Kids always find this part fun.  We talk about how they knew what company it was because of the key words that give us a clue about their goals, purpose, or identity.  Essentially, these become the "mentor texts" for writing a mission of their own.  Obviously you can include any business that you want but the following have worked really well for me.
  • Frontier Airlines: "We are in business to be the best-loved airline.  And we will earn it one action at a time, no matter how big or how small, to create a different and better experience."
  • Dunkin Donuts: "_______ will strive to be the dominant retailer of high quality donuts, bakery products and beverages in each metropolitan market in which we choose to compete."
  • IKEA: "_________'s mission is to offer a wide range of home furnishing items of good design and function, excellent quality and durability, at prices so low that the majority of people can afford to buy them."
  • Hershey's: "Bringing sweet moments of ____ happiness to the world every day."
  • Enterprise: "To be the best transportation service provider in the world, to exceed our customers' expectations for service, quality and value, to provide our employees with a great place to work and to serve our communities as committed corporate citizen."
  • Pizza Hut: "We take pride in making a perfect pizza and providing courteous and helpful service on time, all the time.  Every customer says, 'I'll be back!'"

Step Three: Have your class brainstorm their identity, values, purpose, and goals

Next, I put a giant graphic organizer on the board and invite students to use sticky notes to brainstorm answers.  The questions focus students on how the definition of mission statements are related to our classroom.  I use, "Who are we?", "Why are we here?", "What do we think is important?", "What are our goals?" Here's what it looks like after they've brainstormed:


Step Four: Organize your sticky notes into main ideas

This is a great differentiation opportunity.  Sometimes I just model organizing the sticky notes into main ideas, and sometimes I have students do that for me.  Essentially we group stickies with the same idea together and try to put labels on those groups.  When we are done with that you should have the key words for your mission statements!  I like to star the key words that we saw the most or that we feel are the most important.  That way students have lots of ideas but a few "must haves" to guide them.

This:

 

Turns into this:


Step Five: Actually write a mission statement

Here's the fun part!  Using the filled in graphic organizer, students select key words and create sentences that include them.  Often, I will model some examples first.  With all that prep work, students are ready to write!  I usually let students choose to work in groups or individually to create their class mission statements.

Step Six: Vote for a favorite

Students read their individually written mission statements to the class and then I have students vote for their two favorites using a gallery walk style.  This almost always results in the one I would have chosen anyway.  However, if you don't love the one that your kids chose, you could always pick the top three and work together to combine them into the best mission statement you can come up with.


Thanks for reading!  Feel free to comment with any ways that you have successfully completed mission statements in your classroom.