As of February 10, 2022, according to Kentucky State Board of Cosmetology, Blow Drying is a license that student can strive for through 400 required hours of training by a licensed beauty school such as Louisville Beauty Academy.
Text Louisville Beauty Academy enrollment department number for detail – 502-625-5531
According to Ramirez-Castro and Valenzuela, the majority of high schools students are not being informed about career opportunities in Skilled Trade such as construction or beauty. Beauty services fulfill the basic needs of hair, nail, and skincare. Construction fulfills the basic needs of living and working space and facilities. Anything that is related to the basic needs of humanity is an ON-GOING BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY, that can more often than not generate or cultivate new small business owners.
On November 19, 2021, Louisville Beauty Academy and Shelby County Public School in Kentucky are collaborating and taking a step closer together to address this skilled workforce gap, by exposing Shelby County Public School high school students to beauty industry trade, and skills.
According to KY State Board of Cosmetology, there are four core licenses in the beauty industry as below. Louisville Beauty Academy provides all four programs.
Outside of these four core beauty licenses, KY State Board of Cosmetology provide SOME other permit for what is called as SPECIALTY PERMIT, reserved for currently limited regulated beauty practice such as below. Louisville Beauty Academy also provide these specialty program through our contracting and KY permit vendors.
20 years later: Louisville executives look back on 9/11
I was at University of Louisville Speed school for my first semester as an undergrad for computer engineering and computer science degree. I was with a group of friend trying to get an early brunch/lunch at the engineer cafeteria (today Miller IT Center.)
I was one of many, if not all, students in the Speed school cafeteria gathered around the TV with Breaking News reading “America (or United States) is under attack.” The news was playing the first tower of the World Trade Center on fire, and then another plane going through the second one.
At that moment, I didn’t know what to think but simply having a feeling like the world will fall — more like we are being invaded by aliens from outer space movies that we watched. The real fear of not knowing what to do or where to go, because I immigrated from Vietnam where wars destroy our country. I always believed and still do that the USA is the gold standard and the number one country on earth. So at that moment of the 9/11 attack, I felt lost and wondering where else to go from here.
As part of Kentucky State Board of Cosmetology requirement for enrolling in KY State beauty licensing program school such as Louisville Beauty Academy, a student must be a high school graduate, or having a GED. If student who graduate in state of Kentucky and attended Jefferson County Public School (JCPS), he/she may request a high school transcript online as below:
If you already have your beauty license but haven’t worked in this field for a while, or if you are a transferred licensed professional/student from other states and needing a brush-up for your job or Kentucky State Licensing Examination – THIS IS THE PROGRAM FOR YOU
Di Tran is receiving this recognition on behalf of everyone from Di Tran Enterprise. We thank the community people of Louisville Kentucky for the ongoing support. Di Tran Enterprise wishes to continue this effort to serve and add more value to our community development.
Jewish Family & Career Services Mosaic Award 2020-2021 and Louisville Business First + University of Louisville – Family Business Award Finalist
Louisville Beauty Academy – Founder – Di Tran – Spreading the Community Service Mentality
Di Tran is the founder of Louisville Institute of Technology and the Louisville Beauty Academy. He is currently a participant in the Louisville Welcome Academy, the Office for Globalization’s free leadership training program for leaders who work with the international population.
His work was recently highlighted in Louisville Business First.
Tran says that he is on a mission to bridge the gap that exists “between the foundational knowledge students can learn through college and the practical application of skills that businesses are looking for in new hires.”
The Louisville Institute of Technology is a post-secondary education institution that offers a three-month apprenticeship program for students who want to their basic knowledge and turn it into in-demand skills.
Tran would like to work with employers to offer the program as an alternative training programs, get accredited through the U.S. Department of Education so that students have financial aid options, and become approved by the Kentucky Commission on Proprietary Education in order for veterans to use their benefits.