To improve services for children, teens and adults living with Autism Spectrum Disorder and their families through education and advocacy.
ASK is a non-profit organization serving Greater Louisville and Southern Indiana that provides support for families affected by Autism Spectrum Disorders. ASK provides resources and education for families and individuals through our monthly support meetings, workshops and social events.
Our Community Center is all about building more compassionate communities in the Louisville area. It is a place for our entire community to connect – that includes guests, volunteers, and donors! It is for families who have attended a retreat weekend and want to continue building relationships, families who are hesitant or unable to attend a retreat weekend, and families who are looking for opportunities to serve others!
BCA is a 1:1 intensive teaching environment that uses the principles and methodologies of Applied Behavior Analysis. Although we are a full-time program, we are not an accredited school but a therapeutic medical center. BCA is accredited through the Behavioral Health Center of Excellence, you can learn more through http://www.bhcoe.org. Each learner is assigned a Behavior Analyst who is responsible for their individual programming and behavior plans regarding your child. Each child is then assigned a Speech Pathologist who they will see at a minimum of 3 half-hour sessions per week. Additional members of the treatment team will include Registered Behavior Technicians.
• Year-round intensive treatment program for ages 3-24.
• Individualized instruction designed around each child’s learning style.
• One to one service with highly trained instructors.
• Individualized programs to encourage social, academic and life skills.
• Daily data and program analysis to accurately monitor each child’s progress.
• Vocational Training
• Community based services to prepare children with foundational learning skills and communication.
A typical daily schedule is comprised of direct instruction, discrete trial teaching and natural environment learning in individualized and group setting as determined appropriate by treatment team. Child specific schedules are created based on the needs of each child. Group times may include gross motor/fine motor activities, turn taking, conversational skills, learning to follow group instruction through daily circle time, music, etc. Community based clients will receive services based on client specific need and may vary.
Carriage House Educational Services provides a variety of programs for children up to age six.
Our programs include:
- Traditional preschool for children 2 to 6 years of age
- The Endeavor Program for children 2 to 6 years of age
- The Therapeutic Group Program for children 2 to 6 years of age
- Developmental Intervention Services for children up to 3 years of age
- Behavior Intervention Services
For over 50 years, our programs have been recognized for our success in providing services to children of all abilities in our community.
The Kentucky Center for Special Children Services, Inc. d/b/a Carriage House Educational Services began as the Louisville School for Autistic Children in 1969. It was one of the first schools in the United States provide services to individuals diagnosed with autism and was the highlight of a “60 Minutes” television special in the early ’90s.
Our music lessons for young children are full of fun, interactive activities that not only help develop a strong musical foundation and build essential life skills, but offer a unique bonding experience for you and your child.
Discover for yourself why thousands of families love our innovative music lessons for kids.
Do You Want To Create A Better Life For Yourself? To Have The Freedom To Go Where Ever You Want, When Ever You Choose? The Power To Take Complete Control Of Your Life Is Literally At Your Fingertips!
The mission of Dunn Elementary School is to empower and engage all students to be contributing, responsible citizens reaching their maximum potential through relevant, innovative, and rigorous learning experiences. CAMPUS MOTTO. Respect Yourself, Respect Peers, Respect Adults, Respect the Environment. Be Ready Be Respectful Be Responsible
ecotech, LLC is a leading provider of roll-off, commercial, residential, and recycling collection, processing and disposal for the solid waste industry. We service the greater Louisville and surrounding counties plus southeastern Indiana.
With decades of experience, we have the skills, resources, and flexibility to provide comprehensive solid waste management services to meet the needs of virtually any commercial, roll-off, or residential customer. Our team will work with you to determine the most efficient, cost effective, and innovative solution for your solid waste and recycling needs.
As the largest area privately held, locally owned and operated company, our associates and family members live and work in the kentuckiana area. We are actively involved in our community, neighborhoods, schools, and churches. Our 10,000 trees program has allowed us to plant thousands of trees in virtually all communities and counties in our market area. A partnership with ecotech will create a relationship that will secure your companies present and future waste and recycling needs.
At Friends School of Louisville, we believe the best education is one that engages the whole child. Our unique learning environment is designed to foster the intellectual, social and emotional development of each child in a welcoming and nurturing student-centered setting. Our innovative and challenging academic programs encourage independence and creative thinking, and equip students with the resources and ethical foundation that lead to productive and rewarding lives.
The core of a Friends School education is a progressive hands-on curriculum that incorporates valuable STEAM lessons with arts and service learning. We encourage thoughtful and nonviolent resolution of conflict, and respect and responsibility for the wellbeing of others.
At Friends School of Louisville, we believe the best education is one that engages the whole child. Our unique learning environment is designed to foster the intellectual, social, and emotional development of each child in a welcoming and nurturing student-centered setting. Our innovative and challenging academic programs encourage independence and creative thinking and equip students with the resources and ethical foundation that lead to productive and rewarding lives.
The core of a Friends School education is a progressive hands-on curriculum that incorporates valuable STEAM lessons with arts and service-learning. We encourage thoughtful and nonviolent resolution of conflict, and respect and responsibility for the wellbeing of others.
At Friends School children will acquire the enthusiasm for learning, social confidence, and practical skills that are so critical to their long-term academic success and personal fulfillment. Our students are provided with the guidance, means and freedom to grow into imaginative and caring individuals able to enjoy life and flourish in the world around them.
YOUR CHILD IS UNIQUE—SO IS HIS OR HER PROGRAM
No two children are alike; that’s why all GradePower Learning programs are customized to meet students’ unique learning needs and help them reach their academic goals, whether that’s passing the next test or acing the SAT. Beginning with a dynamic assessment to identify learning needs, GradePower Learning’s tutoring programs help students develop stronger thinking and learning skills, build better school skills, and improve confidence, in every school subject.

GradePower Learning in Louisville is looking for an upbeat, dynamic part-time Math/Science teacher who wants to work in a challenging and rewarding teaching environment. Candidates must possess a strong background in Math and Science and must be comfortable teaching students in Grades 9-12 at all levels in both subjects.
Fun. Fabulous. Uplifting. Magical. These are just a few of the ways that parents describe Music Together. Each week in Music Together classrooms around the world, babies, toddlers, preschoolers, big kids—and the grownups who love them!—gather to make music as a community. Offered at more than 3,000 locations and 40 countries, our early childhood music classes give families with children from birth through age 8 the chance to get in touch with their inner musician and connect with other families.
We’re on a mission to make the world a better place by making it more musical. And you can be part of it by joining one of our music classes in your neighborhood!
The Louisville Free Public Library is the largest public library system in the U.S. state of Kentucky. Officially opened in 1908, the library’s main branch is sited at Fourth and York streets, south of Broadway in downtown Louisville. The library’s Head of Reference from its opening until 1910 was Marilla Waite Freeman, who would go on to become one of the most well-known librarians in the country.
Established in 1797, Jeffersontown is a great example of the amenities and opportunities throughout the great State of Kentucky.
K. Norman Berry Associates Architects was formed in 1971, as the direct successor firm of Oberwarth Associates established in 1895. C. Julian Oberwarth (1900-1983) was the first registered architect in Kentucky and was instrumental in the passage of state legislation to credential architects.
The Kentucky Autism Training Center is a university-based program with a legislative mandate to enhance outcomes for all Kentuckians with ASD. KATC strives to “bridge the research to practice gap” by leveraging resources, building sustainable collaborative relationships, and “scaling-up” the use of evidence-based practices in all regions of Kentucky.
In 1996, the Kentucky General Assembly established the Kentucky Autism Training Center (KATC) to serve as a statewide resource for families and educators. KATC is housed at the University of Louisville’s College of Education and Human Development. For 23 years the KATC supported individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) by providing hands-on training for educators in the classroom, hosting workshops for families, and conducting professional development sessions.
The Kentucky Railway Museum owes its beginning to a small number of rail enthusiasts who formed a local chapter of the National Railway Historical Society in 1948. In the early 1950s, the Chapter asked the Louisville and Nashville Railroad for the donation of a steam locomotive to form the nucleus of a railway museum.
The museum was officially chartered in 1954, and with the donation of steam locomotive #152, we leased six acres of land on River Road and opened to the public on Memorial Day 1958. The museum grew with the addition of other donated rail equipment and artifacts, with over 100,000 visitors coming through the gates by the early 1960s. Over 200,000 people came to the River Road site in the first 10 years of operation!