Re: Internship scared but feeling guilty.
I can understand the frustration of having yet more classroom instruction without much additional clinical exposure to real, live patients. I feel like I can only learn so much without having the clinical experience and exposure with which to both reinforce and to stimulate *applied* learning. Learning about lab values and symptomatology and procedures and treatments only goes so far without having exposure to *actual* *real-time* clinical scenarios with which to compare what my *ideas* are to what the *reality* is that I will be responsible for in a very short time. To me, it feels like a bunch of mechanical parts uselessly clunking around in my head without any structure in which to anchor those parts and fit them into a working system.
Unfortunately for me, much of the learning in nursing seems to follow a "dump a ton of info in" first and let the student/newbie "sort it all out" later. I can see why that happens; otherwise, it would probably cost more to educate and train up new nurses.
In your case, whoever did the hiring saw something in you that they liked. Unless you misrepresented yourself in some way, there is NO reason to feel guilty about being offered and accepting that job. You got it fair and square. And there's nothing wrong with being frustrated with MORE classroom instruction as long as you don't let it spoil your attitude & willingness to learn. Perhaps you can ask about opportunities to shadow (unpaid) during the weeks of classroom instruction so that you can get a bit more context for what you're covering.
I certainly wouldn't recommend quitting unless the job market is better where you are and you've got an iron-clad offer somewhere you *know* would be a better fit. Otherwise, you could end up looking for another job longer than it takes to get through the classroom portion of this orientation.
It may not be your ideal image of what you wish a new grad orientation were, but most facilities' new grad programs aren't anywhere close to anyone's ideal either.
Best wishes!
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