Meet Ms. Courtney
A licensed, ASHA-certified pediatric speech-language pathologist who has spent her career helping kids find their voice, and who built Bloom so more children could get the focused, joyful therapy they deserve.

She always knew she wanted her own practice
From early on, Ms. Courtney knew she wanted to build her own private practice. She trained in speech-language pathology, fell in love with the work, and never looked back.
She spent time in medical speech settings, but she kept coming back to school-based work, where she could partner closely with kids and families over time. Around 2019, during COVID, she was introduced to teletherapy. She stuck with it because she genuinely loves it and, more importantly, because she sees real results.
Over the years she has worked with children in California, Texas, Georgia, and the Carolinas. She is licensed and ASHA-certified (CCC-SLP), and she brings that full range of experience to every single session at Bloom.
Reach more kids, and empower the parents who love them
Bloom exists to provide telehealth speech and language therapy to school districts and rural communities that struggle to find consistent care, and to empower parents through training so therapy continues at home, every day.
Our approach, in five words
Bloom is family-centered, quality, client-based, interactive, and effective. Here is what that looks like in practice. We focus on what each child is already good at, then strengthen those skills, and we keep every session interactive.
Family-centered
Parents are part of the team, not bystanders. We coach you so therapy keeps going at home.
Quality
Licensed, ASHA-certified care, with goals and methods grounded in real clinical experience.
Client-based
Every plan is built around your child, their strengths, their goals, and the way they learn best.
Interactive
Sessions are playful and hands-on. Kids stay engaged because the work feels like fun.
Effective
We aim for progress you can actually see, with goals we track and celebrate together.
"But does online therapy really work?"
It is the question almost every parent asks, because it is not in person. Here is what Ms. Courtney has seen firsthand: kids love the tablet and computer interaction. The screen is engaging, the activities are playful, and attention stays high.
More than that, she has seen measurable progress, often more than in crowded group settings, because children get focused, one-on-one time built entirely around them.