What Works in Public Education

Learning Curves: Donald Trump

Reading the lives of the greats provided inspiration and foundation.

by Donald Trump

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donald trump
Credit: Matthias Clamer/Corbis Outline

Donald Trump, a real estate developer, is the CEO of the Trump Organization and the founder of Trump Entertainment. He was also executive producer and host of the television program The Apprentice.

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During business school, I found myself drawn to the great thinkers and achievers in history, from politics to the arts, from science to literature. I was always interested in good foundations, which I'd learned about from my father, a successful builder and developer. So I wanted my educational foundation to be as solid and well rounded as possible.

Believing that you have to draw on great people in history, not only for perspective but for inspiration, I read biographies of Churchill, Lincoln, Picasso, Einstein, and many other renowned thinkers, from the Greek philosophers to the present.

My first book, which came out in 1987, was called The Art of the Deal. I had realized, back in school, that business could be an art. I think one reason I've been successful is that the realization made me work with the same kind of dedication and sense of purpose that most artists possess. I'd had a comprehensive approach to my education, and I'd had very good company in the kind of people I chose to study in my spare time.

When I was building what has become my most famous building, Trump Tower, on Fifth Avenue in New York City, I was an absolute stickler when it came to the kind of marble we would use for the lobby. I saw hundreds of samples, and even visited the quarry in Italy. Every piece had to be perfect. I was reminded of my school days, when I read about Michelangelo and how particular he was about his materials. I also recalled that he had to deal with a lot of major power players, from a variety of popes to the Medici to the half-mad reformer Savonarola. Despite his overwhelming talent, his was not an easy path, yet he managed to remain true to his artistic ethics. His dedication and tenacity were monumental. I realized that businesspeople and artists can share the same qualities, and sometimes face the same difficulties.

To this day, I enjoy reading about the greats. It's still a part of my daily curriculum, and I'll always be glad I added it to my life as a student. There's nothing like learning a lesson from the masters. Robert Browning once wrote that "a man's reach should exceed his grasp," and I agree. That's one way to avoid complacency, and by applying that concept while still in school, I got a significant push in the right direction.

Learning Curves Home Page  |  Christiane Amanpour  |  Daniel Handler  |  Alice Waters
Barbara Lee  |  Carey Winfrey  |  Donald Trump  |  Frederica von Stade

This article was also published in the July 2007 issue of Edutopia magazine .

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was this helpful?
Anonymous
Posted on 6/21/2007 8:39am

Donald Trump

Egotistical, arrogant, and unbearable. He's the selfish, self-centered, shallow Paris Hilton of the business world; a man born with a silver spoon in his mouth who counts himself among the worlds great thinkers and casts himself as an artist-businessman by comparing his "struggles" with the powerful to those of Michelangelo. Whew! The epitome of hubris.

Donald Trump? Puleeze!!! You're fired!

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Bill Dunsay
Posted on 6/29/2007 7:37am

Donald Trump

Paris Hilton? These two people are in two different world's. One earns money and the other spends it. One doesn't have to like the piublic persona of Donald Trump to recognize his accomplishments in the real estate world. You don't even have to admire what he has done but certainly you have to admit that he is successful. If you are interested in applying some strategies to be successful his description of his method could be useful.

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