Governance

Stewarding the mission with integrity and wisdom

Governance in a Christian school carries spiritual responsibility, legal accountability, and long-term consequence. It shapes culture, safeguards mission, and guides decisions that affect students, families, and future generations. CEN’s governance work exists to support boards, associations, and senior leaders to steward this responsibility faithfully and wisely within increasingly complex regulatory, cultural, and educational environments.

At a glance

Advisory and consultancy support

Providing confidential perspective and deeper engagement when complexity, risk, or transition requires focused attention.

Board capability and maturity

Strengthening effectiveness, shared purpose, and relational health over time.

Governance infrastructure and assurance

Providing practical frameworks, tools, and benchmarks that support regulatory confidence and good decision-making through a biblical lens.

Theological clarity

Grounding authority, accountability, and service in a clear biblical understanding of godly leadership, authentic Christian education and parental responsibility.

How CEN supports governance in parent-governed schools

CEN’s governance support is layered to strengthen Boards continuously, not only when something appears wrong.

Through membership, boards receive year-round frameworks, tools, formation, and advisory access. When deeper or context-specific support is required, tailored consultancy engagements can be commissioned alongside membership.

This approach supports both day-to-day faithfulness and long-term governance maturity.

Through membership

Membership provides practical governance infrastructure that supports both conviction and regulatory confidence.

Frameworks and assurance

  • CEN Christian School Governance Standard aligned with ACNC and state registration requirements
  • Governance Self-Assessment Tool for regular reviews
  • Governance Green Tick recognition
  • Annual Board Governance Performance Survey
  • Participation in the Annual Financial Survey benchmarking conducted by Somerset Education
  • Independent Whistleblowing Service mandated under the Corporations Act

Resources and continuity

Training and formation

  • Governance training sessions and workshops
  • Online modules
  • Flint & Steel governance webinar series

Through consultancy

When deeper or more specific support is required, CEN offers scoped consultancy engagements, including:

  • Governance reviews
  • Constitution reviews
  • Board development programmes
  • Facilitated board–principal relationship work
  • Association health reviews and succession planning

Board training

Governance Module 7 – Leading the Vision and Mission

One of the first priorities for a board member is to understand the vision, mission and values of your school. It is your duty to uphold this, as it is set out in your Constitution, and to ensure the school’s vision is lived out in your community. This course will help boards in this important task.

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Governance Module 6 – The Board and Principal

One of the most important relationships for your board is the relationship between the board and the principal/executive principal. This cannot be emphasised enough. Together, you provide direction, leadership, and vision for the school community; your roles are different, but a school will thrive when the principal and board are working well together. This course will help boards in this important relationship.

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Governance Module 5 – Board Meetings and Decision-Making

A board’s meeting time is essential to good governance – not only in terms of the decisions made, but also related to the interactions with management, the opportunity to listen to each other, to set the tone and to forge a strong team. This course will help boards to have effective, efficient and uplifting board meetings.

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Governance Module 4 – Board Papers and Records

A board needs to be both diligent, and able to show its diligence. Board papers and records are a critical aspect of the effective oversight of the school, underpin the relationship between the executive and the board, and fulfil an important compliance function. This course will help boards to be provided good information and keep appropriate records.

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Governance Module 3 – Board Conduct

Board service is much like the rest of the Christian walk – we not only think about what we do, but also the attitude and manner in which we do it. This course will help boards to reflect on their conduct as they carry out their important task

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Governance Module 2 – Due Diligence

A Christian school board should demonstrate a godly attitude to their governance duties and faithfulness in the governance task. In many ways, community and regulatory expectations align very well with our Christian values of integrity, transparency and working for the good of others. In governance, this is captured in the concept of ‘due diligence’. This course will help boards in this very important aspect of board service.

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Governance Module 1 – The Board’s Governance Role

It is an incredible privilege to serve on the board of a Christian school. The Association places in their board’s hands their responsibility for the school, school community, and its resources under the vision and mission of the school. This is a wonderful ministry and a significant challenge. This course will help boards in this important task.

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The theological foundation of parent-governed education

CEN’s approach to governance is shaped by a clear biblical understanding of parent-governed education.

Scripture places primary responsibility for the formation of children with parents. Christian schools exist to assist families in this calling, not replace them. Boards therefore govern not as owners, but as stewards, acting on behalf of families who have entrusted their children to the school’s care.

This theological understanding shapes how authority, accountability, and service are exercised in Christian school governance.

When boards typically engage CEN

Boards engage CEN for ongoing training, formation and resources, and also during seasons of renewal, changing or increasing responsibility, or challenge. 

Common situations include:

  • board induction or renewal cycles
  • regular governance self-assessment
  • registration or regulatory reviews
  • questions about mission alignment or governance practice
  • succession planning
  • board–principal role tension
  • financial sustainability concerns
  • constitutional review
  • governance complaints or whistleblowing obligations
  • desire to improve board effectiveness in specific areas

Why CEN’s governance approach matters

CEN’s governance work is embedded within a national Christian education movement and anchored in biblical foundations. The counsel provided is shaped by shared conviction and lived experience, not detached theory.

Board chairs have access to confidential advice and mentoring when issues cannot yet be raised formally. This creates space to test concerns, think clearly, and act wisely. Because CEN deeply understands parent-governed schooling, governance support is tailored, practical, and context-aware.

Taking the next step

Most governance engagements begin with CEN membership and a conversation with a State Executive Officer or another member of the CEN team.

From there, Boards may access self-assessment tools, training, advisory conversations, or tailored consultancy engagements as needed, aligned with their current responsibilities and challenges.