Rebecca O’Brien graduated with a Regent’s Citation from Georgetown University in 2009 as a double language major in Russian Studies and Spanish. She received her Master’s of Science in Education in 2012 while teaching at the American School of Quito, in Ecuador. She spent another four years in Shenzhen, China, teaching middle school Humanities at Shekou International School. When she returned to the U.S. after nearly eight years of teaching abroad, Rebecca pursued a postgraduate certificate program in Educational Therapy at the University of California at Riverside and received her Wilson Level I Teacher Certification at the same time.
Currently, Rebecca works privately in the San Diego and La Jolla areas. She is available to meet with students in their school, virtually, or during at-home visitations. Rebecca specializes in providing individualized reading support for struggling readers (ages 7+) using the Wilson Reading System*. For emergent readers, that could also include Wilson Fundations and Heggerty Programs.
Rebecca takes pride in providing attentive, tailored, and detail-oriented support to families. As an educational therapist, she understands how to work with students who have complex learning profiles and other diagnoses. As a mother, she understands the sensitive, yet beautiful nature of every child; Rebecca believes that in every encounter, one should lead with compassion and kindness.
*What is the Wilson Reading System?
This is a structured literacy program that is based on the Orton-Gillingham Approach to literacy. Wilson is considered a Tier-3 Intervention for students aged 8+ who have fallen behind in school and cannot progress using traditional classroom methods. The popular Wilson FUNdamentals can be the Tier-2 Intervention for younger readers (JK-2) and is derived from the Wilson Reading System. Heggerty is a Phonological and Phonemic Awareness program that can be used with Pre-K and up.
WRS Level 1 Teacher Certification, 2021
Rebecca O’Brien has been awarded this Wilson Professional Credential following her successful completion of over 250 hours of hands-on training around word-study concepts, procedures, and reading research within the Wilson Reading System (Grades 2+). She is trained in helping struggling readers build their phonological awareness, phonics, vocabulary, reading comprehension, and reading fluency in an intensive 1-2-1 format.
Classroom Teacher and Tutor, 10+ years Experience
Rebecca has woked in several private institutions both abroad (American School of Quito, Ecuador and Shekou International School, Shenzhen, China) and locally (Francis Parker School, San Diego). Before becoming an educational therapist, she worked as an ESL tutor, Humanities Teacher, and an Academic Resource support teacher for middle schoolers.
Client Testimonials
What Our Clients Are Saying
Hear firsthand accounts of healing and positive change.
Margarita Wilkinson
Wed Feb 03 2021
Alex Wornovitzky
Eric Lillie
Fri Apr 30 2021
Cooper Tweeten
Wed Feb 03 2021
Stella Wahl
Grade 7 Student, San Diego
Janie Linnard
Sat May 01 2021
Bryce Parker
Sun May 02 2021
Help center
Questions and Answers
Find answers to the most commonly asked questions about our services.
What should I expect when we first begin?
The educational therapist will want to meet you or the client and collect some information. The first few sessions are usually performing a variety of educational assessments to collect data and observations. These are assessments that will inform the learning plan. A formal summary report will be made using information collected during the first few sessions. All medical history and reports should be disclosed, including other testing.
A detailed learning plan will be made and with parents and school to suggest any useful classroom modifications, academic scaffolding, behavioral strategies for home and school, and a list of current strengths and academic weaknesses. Letters can be written and interviews or meetings are regularly held with other professionals involved in the treatment alliance.
Who do you normally work with?
Rebecca has extensive experience working with children aged 6-16 to improve their sound awareness, build increasing working memory, expand their foundational number sense, and improve their self-concept through normalizing their struggles with learning issues. Clients typically have attentional, language-based, or other learning challenges.
The plans evolve with the needs of the client?
The Wilson Language System is very structured and a Tier-3 intervention that usually requires anywhere from 50-100 hours of remediation to improve up to 3 grade levels in both spelling and reading. The program is designed to be completed in 2-3 years, ending at a high school proficiency.
For some students, language support may be in foundational math – using multisensory strategies to learn and acquire new concepts. A third grade student may evolve from learning to read/write intensively to catch up 5 days a week for 45 minutes to becoming an independent 5th grade reader/writer who needs only 1 or 2 days a week to keep learning how to study, organize their thinking, and process new concepts in math.
What does a typical learning plan look like?
Tutors have subject matter expertise in specific academic areas, like reading, grammar, writing, spelling, or math. Tutors mainly preview and reteach concepts taught in school for reinforcement; they help students prepare for tests and impart study skills specific within a particular core discipline. Tutors often do not have the formal educational training to understand how emotional, behavioral, social, physical factors may be impacting a learner’s ability to process, retain, or apply academic content and skills.
Educational therapists have subject matter expertise (many are former classroom teachers), but also have advanced training in structured learning modalities (such as Wilson) that are designed for those with unique cognitive profiles. ETs are trained to work directly with the challenges that come with having a learning difficulty – such as dyslexia, sensory processing issues, executive functioning deficits, or delayed language development. Work done in sessions complements the academic objectives of school; however, the ET goes more in-depth with the individual to also examine/explain the way they think or behave while performing academic tasks and to teach them hacks.
Where and when do you hold sessions?
Rebecca holds private sessions in clients’ homes, in quiet shared spaces (library/office), or in the school setting. She usually works with families within the central San Diego area. Some older students work with her remotely due to scheduling issues.
How many sessions to see results?
Educational therapists set goals that are measurable academic skills that can be charted over time. Usually learning plans are designed for 3-month intervals, but last from several months to several years until the client is independently performing for their age.
What is the pay structure and cost for services?
The 2026 professional hourly rate for Rebecca’s services is currently 145$/hour. Rebecca O’Brien charges an hourly rate for all her services, prorated for time. One professional hour is considered 50 minutes, with 10 minutes of planning. This fee increases slightly every fiscal new year to adjust for rising costs of inflation.

