I am an ICU nurse with 1 and 1/4 years of experience who went right into the ICU after school. So far, my experience has been very positive and I attribute a lot of this to the open arms my unit has toward new grads who have a good attitude. I feel that I am a very conscientious nurse and that I do a good job, but I can also readily admit that support from my fellow workers is a big part of that. After surviving my first year as a new grad, I have made taking the CCRN exam one of my major goals to get done by the end of this year. From that groundwork, I have some questions for the more veteran nurses here.
For those that passed the test, regardless of time on the job, was your accomplishment acknowledged positively by your co-workers or was it seen as being showy? Related to that, did you feel that people expected you to be a "guru" who should be chock full of answers to everything and then roll their eyes at you if you didn't know something? Lastly, do you feel that studying for the exam improved your overall knowledge base to the point of making a permanent improvement in your practice?
And for anyone who would like to weigh in on this part with experience or wisdom, please do. Right now, I feel I do a good job at work for the reasons listed above, but at the same time I am keenly aware that there is an enormous amount that I don't know yet because I don't have experience. I don't take it for granted I will pass CCRN on the first try, but assuming I do, I am worried about how other co-workers with much more experience then me will look at me. At age forty, I feel like real experience is almost always better than book smarts and at my level of time as a nurse there isn't much I can do about my lack of experience. I do think studying for CCRN will help solidify some of the things I have seen so far but I know it's no substitute for experience.
Any thoughts on any of the above from the wise I have seen here would be most welcome