Discipline is the opposite of acting on impulse. It helps students take reality seriously and engage with its meaning—making it a tool for personal growth.
A student’s personality develops as they grow in their ability to judge and choose freely. But true freedom requires a criterion for judgment. The most human criterion is the one rooted in our nature: the set of deep needs that arise in every human experience—the need for truth, goodness, beauty, freedom, justice…
Discipline fosters the kind of educational relationship that helps students recognize and respond to those needs in the context of daily school life.
Discipline is not an end in itself. It is a condition that allows learning to take place. Rules for behavior and community life are rooted in the values they represent—such as punctuality, order, cleanliness, attention, silence, and respect—and they create the conditions in which our educational mission can flourish.