The ABCs of Reading

Lucas Timm, who graduated from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in May with an elementary education degree, completed part of his practicum by working in the Kit and Dick Schmoker Reading Center. The Schmoker Reading Center provides reading and writing tutoring to children in the community from graduate and undergraduate students. (Kristen Labadie/University Communication and Marketing)

UNL graduate Lucas Timm practices one-on-one instruction in Schmoker Reading Center

By Kristina Jackson | University Communication and Marketing

A semester tutoring in the University of Nebraska–Lincoln’s Kit and Dick Schmoker Reading Center gave Lucas Timm a foundation in individualizing education and understanding students.

Timm, who graduated in May with an elementary education degree, said his experience, part of the Practicum in Reading and Writing Disabilities, taught him valuable lessons about meeting student needs. Timm and his student, a fourth grader with dyslexia, developed a bond that deepened the student’s reading instruction.

“I got to target a bunch of different lessons toward her needs and help her read,” said Timm, a native of Pender, Nebraska. “It really helped me learn how to work with students in a one-on-one setting.”

Husker students in the course are paired with a child and meet with them twice a week throughout the semester to work on reading skills. The Schmoker Reading Center provides individualized, one-on-one instruction to students who are reading below grade level, typically serving 45 to 90 students per semester.

The Schmoker Reading Center, named for UNL alumni Kit and Richard “Dick” Schmoker, was established in 2008 as a one-of-a-kind program in Nebraska. Kit Schmoker recently made a leadership gift to help the reading center expand its services to communities, schools and children throughout Nebraska.

Timm said that being able to work with one student long term helped him build a relationship and learn how to tailor the sessions to her. For the first few meetings, Timm said they did activities to identify her interests, which gave him ideas for how to keep her engaged in learning.

“She was really into the show ‘Gravity Falls,’ so I would target some lessons and make it related so I could keep her interest in it,” he said.

This understanding of the student guided Timm as he put together lessons. He would try to plan activities that played to her strengths to reinforce the reading lesson and keep her interested and enthusiastic.

“She was a big fan of math, so we would do games where I would make almost a code for her in numbers and she would have to decode it using letters,” Timm said. “As soon as she had a whole word, she would have to sound it out and figure out what the word is.”

Timm appreciated the opportunity to gain experience working with a student individually. Practicum and student teaching experience typically involves working with large groups to prepare them for the classroom. But Timm said the tutoring experience prepared him for instructing future students who might need more assistance.

“Not only are they getting extra practice, but they’re also getting a person to talk to,” he said.

Timm said it was the “best feeling in the world” to watch his student grow over the semester. The children take a test at the beginning and end of the semester to monitor their progress, and his student improved in nearly every metric.

“It was really nice to be able to see that progress on paper,” Timm said.

He also learned from working alongside other future teachers. He could see the exercises they were using and was inspired to try to modify some of them for his own student. One of his favorite activities was a scavenger hunt inspired by another future teacher working in the center. The child would read a clue, which would lead them to a spot in the building where they would find a reading activity that gave them the next clue. Timm said his student especially enjoyed this game.

“I could tell her problem-solving brain was firing on all cylinders,” he said. “It was really helpful to take a lesson somebody else had structured and then target it toward my kid.”

This fall, Timm is teaching social studies and science and coaching basketball in the Mead Public Schools. Timm’s experience tutoring in the Schmoker Reading Center gave him a clearer picture of how he wants to run his classroom.

“I take an empathetic approach,” he said. “That’s how I want to treat all the kids in my class in the future.”

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