Top 22 Quotes & Sayings by Laurene Powell Jobs

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American philanthropist Laurene Powell Jobs.
Last updated on December 23, 2024.
Laurene Powell Jobs

Laurene Powell-Jobs is an American billionaire businesswoman and executive. Powell-Jobs is founder and chair of Emerson Collective, an organization that supports social entrepreneurs who are committed to the ideal that everyone ought to have the chance to live to their full potential. Powell-Jobs is also the co-founder and chairman of XQ Institute, which aims to rethink American high schools. Powell-Jobs resides in Palo Alto, California, with her three children. She is the widow of Steve Jobs, co-founder and former CEO of Apple Inc., and she manages the Steve Jobs Trust. She has recently been a major donor to Democratic Party politicians.

I started getting more and more active around immigration reform because this was such a waste of lives, such a waste of potential, such a waste for our country not to have the human capital that we developed - geared toward improving our entire society.
The innovation and creativity that's so manifest in the rest of society needs to be turned on our school systems.
The beauty of having an LLC in today's world is No. 1, you have the ability to act and react as nimbly as need be to create change, and you have the ability to invest politically, in the for-profit sector and the nonprofit sector simultaneously.
It's our privilege to work with College Track students as they chart their course toward a college degree - they bring persistence, creativity, and extraordinary discipline throughout their academic journey.
It's hard when people die, but there's something about when people die suddenly. — © Laurene Powell Jobs
It's hard when people die, but there's something about when people die suddenly.
Broken institutions are an opportunity rather than a time to go home.
I came across this circumstance of undocumented students. These are kids who were brought to this country as youngsters, who are raised as Americans and go to American schools, and then when they graduate high school, they have no prospects in front of them because they are undocumented and illegally in the United States.
There is a huge gap between what students want for their future and what their schools are offering.
To do what you wanna do, to leave a mark - in a way that you think is important and lasting - that's a life well-lived.
My relationship with money is that it's a tool to be self-sufficient, but it's not something that is a part of who I am.
I have more time to work; I just do. Because once your kids are up and running, that frees you up a good 20, 30, hours a week.
That's why our country is such a beautiful, beautiful experiment: We manifest, we allow freedom if you follow certain rules and if you work really hard. That's at the root of our cherished values.
I've always had this idea that you have to make the most of things.
It's not that our high school system was not designed well, but that it was designed in 1906 when the country was just out of the industrial era. There hasn't been a substantial systemic change the way we do high school since then.
The way that we are going to solve social problems is by working with multiple different types of investing.
Regardless of zip code, talent and IQ are evenly distributed, so we need to make sure that opportunity is evenly distributed, too.
How about we agree upon what our common American values are, which is let's make this a true land of opportunity.
Teachers have told us across the country that what's severely outdated is the teacher at the front of the classroom as the font of knowledge, because as we know, access to knowledge and information is now ubiquitous. So instead, teachers want to help students learn how to think so that they can be lifelong learners.
As a parent, you have to be good coach and bad coach, and I think in the college-application process, I didn't want to be bad coach. 'This is amazing! I'm so proud of you!' That's the role I wanted with my kids.
Whether someone signs something is not what's important. It's what they do and how they do it that matters.
I much prefer STEAM to STEM. The insertion of the A is arts writ large, and when you learn how to think, that means that you actually need to understand how others have thought before you, how have others made sense of the world.
How about we agree upon what our common American values are, which is lets make this a true land of opportunity. — © Laurene Powell Jobs
How about we agree upon what our common American values are, which is lets make this a true land of opportunity.
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