President Trump Allegedly Taking Night Classes to Learn How to Read a Room
- Chadwick Dolgos

- Nov 16, 2025
- 2 min read
President Donald Trump, the author of the bestselling book "The Art of the Deal," has reportedly enrolled in night classes at a local community college to master the skill of reading a room, acknowledging difficulties in gauging public sentiment during his second term.
The move comes after he abruptly withdrew his endorsement of Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene following a disagreement over releasing the Epstein Files and then publicly questioned Representative Thomas Massie’s decision to remarry, despite Trump’s own trio of wedding ceremonies.
The classes, held twice a week in a dimly lit classroom filled with adult learners, focus on basic social cues and emotional intelligence.
"It's tremendous, really the best class," Trump said. "I'm learning so much about what people are thinking without them having to tell me. Believe me, nobody reads a room better than I do, but even the best room readers need a refresher sometimes."
The first session examined timing in public statements. Participants reviewed video clips of congressional hearings, pausing to identify moments when restraint might be preferable to confrontation.
Trump took detailed notes and later requested additional footage from his own rallies for comparison.
“I asked him to consider the difference between commanding attention and alienating allies,” the instructor said. “He responded that attention is currency.”
A fellow participant, a local business owner studying leadership skills, observed Trump during a paired exercise on active listening. The task required each person to summarize the other’s position without interruption. Trump completed the assignment but followed up with a three-minute analysis of market leverage in the conversation.
An administration official familiar with the arrangement described the classes as strategic professional development.
“The president processes information at high speed,” the official explained. “This is about calibrating delivery for maximum impact in a divided Congress.”
The program spans eight weeks and includes modules on nonverbal cues, coalition maintenance, and managing public perception during policy disagreements.
Homework assignments involve drafting measured responses to hypothetical criticisms. Trump reportedly revises each one multiple times before submission.
Trump is currently failing the course, according to his professor, but is showing promising potential.
Others notably taking the course alongside the president include Seth Dillon, Mark Levin, and Ben Shapiro.
Do you know somebody who has been personally injured by satire and comedy? Show your support for the principles of free speech and stand with Freedom Writers by signing our petition today!








Comments