Then contact your state congress/assembly  person to complain that you aren't 
allowed to contact the board personally. There needs to be exceptions for 
students who can not rely on their schools to act on their behalf.

Maggie Franklin: 
Owner & Artist, The Art of Nailz, Visalia CA
 "Visionary rebel dreamer; obviously way ahead of my time."
Maggie Rants [and Raves]@Nails Magazine 
Facebook




>________________________________
> From: The Retreat <theretreatgrambl...@gmail.com>
>To: nailtech@googlegroups.com 
>Sent: Sunday, June 30, 2013 4:00 PM
>Subject: Re: NailTech:: Took my State Boards--not what I expected
>  
>Hi Christine,
>That is absolutely correct and it states it on the website that students can't 
>call the state boards because it slows down progress or business.  I thought 
>that was crazy as well.  So any and all things dealing with the state test 
>must come through the school. Someone on the boards recommended I start a 
>school and after this incident, I am seriously thinking about it.  I would 
>never want anyone to experience this. Below is the information from the state 
>website. 
>
>
>"Students will not be permitted to contact the LSBC under any circumstances. 
>Students are to contact their respective schools for any information 
>pertaining to testing (scores, test dates, cancellation or rescheduling, 
>etc.). The school is to then contact the office via fax. This procedure is 
>necessary due to the influx of arbitrary phone calls that come into the 
>office, which interrupts the flow of production. This is also an effort to 
>maintain the relationship between the "graduated student and its graduating 
>school". Some students are under the assumption that they have the authority 
>to override the school and clear themselves. " 
>
>
>
>
>On Wed, Jun 26, 2013 at 4:41 PM, Christine <cggra...@bellsouth.net> wrote: 
>You can't call the State because you're a student??? That's crap! In 
>Tennessee, I called and asked questions beside the fact that you pay them And 
>the testing place to take the written & practical here. Here, I had to bring a 
>live model to work on...couldn't be in cosmetology in any way....I had only 
>been living here 2 years and didn't know anyone but fellow students so I 
>brought my husband!!!!! (Such a good sport...lol!!)  I called the state and 
>asked if I could use him as my model and they said yes. I was never deterred 
>from contacting them....have you tried to call them???  
>>
>>
>>I too was an only student, basically teaching myself but I passed with flying 
>>colors because I worked my butt off on my own. Some of these schools are all 
>>about profit and they suck. Your experience is all too common.  I am 
>>determined to open a Nails only school in the future when I'm tired of 
>>working in a salon!! I think it's so badly needed....just to have it all be 
>>nails and real nail techs as instructors!!  
>>
>>
>>Good luck and keep us posted....oh and by the way-the trainer hand was the 
>>best investment I ever made in my education...even if you cant use it for 
>>your test...please keep it and never stop learning....😄 Christine
>>
>>
>>On Jun 26, 2013, at 4:52 PM, CloserToMyDreams <theretreatgrambl...@gmail.com> 
>>wrote: 
>>Thank you Katherine! I did a mock practical with my instructor and passed so 
>>I definitely thought it would be easy breezy at the boards.  I've had so many 
>>disputes with the school that I just enter with my guard up all of the time 
>>if I need to discuss anything.  Thank you for the feedback.
>>>DeVariaOn Wednesday, June 26, 2013 2:52:05 PM UTC-5, Katherine Fahrig wrote:
>>>State boards are morons.Unfortunately, they hold the power over your license 
>>>so you must do as they say. Your school did not prepare you properly. When I 
>>>apprenticed my employee I taught her the way to do clients nails correctly. 
>>>When it came time for her to take her state boards I got her kit ready for 
>>>her and went through it step by step with the instructions that the state 
>>>board had given me in my apprenticeship package and then gave her a "mock" 
>>>board exam. I made sure that she knew exactly what the state board practical 
>>>exam would require.  Your school is at fault for not properly preparing 
>>>their student (you). DO write to your state board complaining about your 
>>>school, DO send/take a written letter with your complaint to the school and 
>>>make sure that they know that you will be filing a complaint with the BBB 
>>>and the State board of Cosmetology if they do not supply you with the 
>>>correct training to pass the state board. THAT IS THEIR JOB! To
 provide you with the hours and training to pass the state board exam! That is 
what you paid them for! I would demand that THEY pay for you to retake the 
test. It was their fault that you failed.  Now, just to clarify the whole tip 
on a sculptured nail thing, the old fingers/hands that were used for testing 
need to have a plastic tip glued over the entire nail bed of the practice hand, 
shortened down to the end of the finger, to simulate a nail plate. I do not 
remember why, just that it had to be done. Stupid, I know, but the state board 
holds the power over your license, just do it the way they say, get your 
license and give them the finger after you have that piece of paper in your 
hand. KatherineSt. Louis, MO  
>>>> 
>>>>
>>>>________________________________
>>>> From:  Maggie in Visalia <onyko...@yahoo.com>;  To:  
>>>> nail...@googlegroups.com <nail...@googlegroups.com>;  Subject:  Re: 
>>>> NailTech:: Took my State Boards--not what I expected  Sent:  Wed, Jun 26, 
>>>> 2013 7:13:57 PM    
>>>>Yeesh.
>>>> 
>>>>What state are you in? 
>>>> 
>>>>I know you've posted before about being frustrated with your school, but 
>>>>honestly, you'd probably be frustrated with any school because there are SO 
>>>>few of them that offer the type of training and eduction most of us expect 
>>>>when we enroll. 
>>>> 
>>>>As for the trainer hand, it actually sounds like this is a case where your 
>>>>SCHOOL is WAY AHEAD OF your STATE BOARD! 
>>>> 
>>>>Unfortunately, the St. Board holds all the cards on this one, so it doesn't 
>>>>matter that THEY are the ones who are IGNORANT-- you're gonna have to do it 
>>>>again and do it they're way. And your school should have a better grasp on 
>>>>what the Board expects so they can prepare students for that experience. It 
>>>>doesn't really matter, in the long run, that the trainer is a better device.
>>>> 
>>>>BUT!! FIGHT IT!! Send pictures of your hand to the St. Board! Send a LONG, 
>>>>carefully written letter to the St. Board! TELL THEM exactly what you 
>>>>experienced and WHY you were told you failed the exam and let them know 
>>>>that their examiners are the ones who are wrong on this one! That the nail 
>>>>trainer meets their criteria for the exam and that you performed the 
>>>>service correctly but that the EXAMINER was the weak link. And that the St. 
>>>>Board NEEDS to address this before they continue to erroneously fail 
>>>>students just for being more competent than the examiners. 
>>>> 
>>>>Seriously-- ANYONE who knows *@&!^@!! about sculpting nails would be able 
>>>>to wrap their brain around your sculptured nail without a tip. DUH! They 
>>>>should be able to SEE and COMPREHEND the structure of the nail trainer and 
>>>>SEE and COMPREHEND the structure of your sculpted nail and "grade" you on 
>>>>your work based on that comprehension. It sounds like the examiner you 
>>>>spoke with understood why tips are usually used for that service and 
>>>>understood that a true sculptured nail shouldn't use a tip-- so if they can 
>>>>clearly see that your practice hand didn't NEED a tip for that service, why 
>>>>would you get marked down for doing it properly? 
>>>> 
>>>>OK. Now I'm all worked up. 
>>>> 
>>>>But DO contact your St. Board, write/call/email as many people in the 
>>>>organization as you can get contact info for, make sure they get their 
>>>>story straight so this doesn't happen to others! 
>>>> 
>>>>OH! And as for your "unprofessional texts" PHOOEY! Stand up to your school! 
>>>>Put your foot down, look them in the eye, and let them know in no uncertain 
>>>>terms that THEY work for YOU! Don't let them intimidate or bully you.
>>>> 
>>>>As for the texting? It's not YOUR issue that their student was interrupted 
>>>>during class by your texts. It's HER phone, it's up to HER to silence it 
>>>>and it's HER choice if she reads/answers texts or calls during class. 
>>>>Frankly, it sounds like using cell phones was never an issue during class 
>>>>before or for anyone else, so they don't get to start nitpicking this time. 
>>>>But if they're going to be mad at anyone, it should be the student in the 
>>>>class who didn't turn off her phone, NOT the person who texted her. 
>>>> 
>>>>Not that I'm trying to pin it on your friend-- sounds like it's a GOOD 
>>>>thing she got that text so SHE can deliver the news to the class since the 
>>>>school and the state board don't seem to be on the same page.
>>>> 
>>>>Now go contact your state board and send them all those pictures of the 
>>>>nail trainer!
>>>>
>>>>Maggie Franklin: 
>>>>Owner & Artist, The Art of Nailz, Visalia CA
>>>> "Visionary rebel dreamer; obviously way ahead of my time."
>>>>Maggie Rants [and Raves]@Nails Magazine  
>>>>Facebook
>>>> From: CloserToMyDreams <theretrea...@gmail.com>
>>>>>To: nail...@googlegroups.com 
>>>>>Sent: Wednesday, June 26, 2013 10:04 AM
>>>>>Subject: NailTech:: Took my State Boards--not what I expected
>>>>>  
>>>>>Hello everyone!
>>>>>Yesterday, I traveled 4 hours for my state boards.  I was a bit nervous 
>>>>>because it was finally time to do this!! I arrived early, and was speaking 
>>>>>with a staff member and he told me there were three tests--a state, a 
>>>>>national and a practical.  I was shocked because the entire time at school 
>>>>>I was only informed of a state exam. So naturally I became anxious.  I 
>>>>>texted my classmate and told her that I was told about a national exam and 
>>>>>she was like, "what?" I reviewed the practice 10 questions online and 
>>>>>began to think that I probably should have focused a bit more on natural 
>>>>>sciences.  Oh well, I was there, I read my chapters so I would just go 
>>>>>with it.  I get inside and we are to take our practical first.  I see the 
>>>>>other candidates pull out the individual fingers.  The examiner walks by 
>>>>>each and then when he gets to me and sees my "nail trainer" he jumps back 
>>>>>and says, "whoa, what is that?" I told him it is the hand we use at school 
>>>>>and I
 was told I could bring it.  He then says, "sometimes schools don't know what 
the hell they are talking about." He then asks me where are my clear tips? I 
tell him that I have them to place on the hand. So now, I'm even more 
NERVOUS!!! We begin the practical which is 45 minutes to do a tip with overlay, 
a sculptured nail and a repair.  I perform all of those with time to spare.  As 
the examiners come to me again, I get puzzled looks from the both of them.  We 
begin our written exams and while taking it, another examiner comes up and asks 
to borrow my hand.  He takes it behind the podium and they gather around and 
begin speaking.  This is awful for testing, anxiety and nervousness and it's 
difficult for me to focus because I am now trying to figure out what is going 
on.  So I finish the written exams--both state and national.  I'm feeling good 
about the two and during my checkout, I ask the examiner what is their concern 
about the nail trainer.
  He says, "well, next time, you want to put clear tips on all of the 
fingers...I'm not supposed to be talking to you about that but next time" I 
can't even remember what he said after that because all I heard was "NEXT 
TIME."  I pointed that out to him and said, "sir, you said "next time" so that 
means I failed." He nodded yes. I leave out and just sit in my car.  I'm going 
through the steps in my head, I refer to my book and yes I followed all steps.  
He comes outside and I stop him. "Sir, I hate to disturb you but could you tell 
me what was wrong with the hand." He says that I should have put the tip to the 
cuticle area on all three fingers. He said he couldn't see the tip on my 
sculpted nail.  I told him that a sculpted nail doesn't include a tip, it's 
free formed. He said yes, but when candidates bring in the fingers or even the 
rubber hand, they have to attach the tip to it, then cut it down then sculpt 
over it so that I can see where the
 sculpting started. I told him that there is no need for that on the nail 
trainer because of the anatomical set up of the nail plate. He told me that 
that is what I will need to do on my next test.  I went back to my car and 
cried. I thought all of this would be over on that day.  I was hoping my 
experience with the ill-equipped school was over.  I just didn't have anything 
else in me.  I cried for a long time. I told my classmate to just buy the 
fingers for her test, forget the hand, I didn't want them to experience this. 
She told the instructor who then told the school owner who then called boards 
and they told her that I had a painted hand and that is why I failed.  My 
classmate then told the instructor how I felt that we were not prepared for the 
boards and how I felt frustrated that the hand they told me was appropriate was 
not familiar to the examiners.  I took a pic of the nail trainer to prove that 
I did not have a "painted hand." My
 classmate showed it to them. Today, I called the school and spoke with the 
owner because I was tired of third party back and forth.  I explained my 
situation and she was more interested in defending the school.  She said that I 
shouldn't have texted my classmate and stressed them out while they were at 
school.  My classmate texted me how I was doing and asked for updates.  When we 
talked, she excused herself from the building.  For those who are unfamiliar 
with my backstory, I go to a school where we read the chapter and then ask the 
instructor for an answer sheet and take the test.  We do not have real theory 
courses, it is mostly independent study.  I did not have an instructor who 
guided me daily and a lot of the things I learned were from watching education 
ambassadors on you tube, through forums and by reading my text.  So it is not 
as if my texts interrupted class or if my classmate excused herself from class. 
 We sit in a room, usually
 talking to each other and that didn't happen for me until I only had 2 months 
left because before then I was the only nail tech student. 
>>>>>Well, the owner then tells me how I was unprofessional to text my 
>>>>>classmate and I told her that I was giving my friend the heads up so that 
>>>>>she would not experience it.  I then informed her that I believed it was 
>>>>>unprofessional for my school not to contact me after they heard about my 
>>>>>board fiasco. She told me she didn't appreciate me saying that to her. She 
>>>>>proceeded to raise her voice and over talk me. She ended with that there 
>>>>>was nothing she could do until she received my results and we would 
>>>>>proceed from there.  I agreed. I sent a pic to my classmate of the hand 
>>>>>and she showed the instructor who became frustrated because she didn't 
>>>>>understand why they would fail me because I didn't apply a tip for a 
>>>>>sculptured nail. I'm feeling pretty down, a day later.  I'm not as upset 
>>>>>but to know that I will have to drive 4 hours again, pay again and 
>>>>>continue to deal with this school is upsetting. I will purchase the 
>>>>>fingers for next time and hopefully,
 whenever I receive the results (I have to call the school every Friday to see 
if they received my results), I hope the test date is soon.  I sent off for 
boards in May and received a test date for June 25.  Since I probably won't be 
able to send off until July, I probably won't get a date until August and I had 
expected to have moved back to Florida by then and do reciprocity. This is so 
unfortunate :'-( I've attached a photo of my nail trainer and the work for 
state boards.  I'm just coming out of school so it won't be as spectacular as 
what you guys are doing. But the middle finger is tip with overlay, the ring 
finger is the repair and the pinky is the sculpt. 
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