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Join the Transition Room Pilot

The Transition Room Pilot is a simulation-based readiness experience designed for new graduate nurses preparing to enter bedside practice.

This pilot cohort is limited in size to ensure a focused, supportive learning environment.

Applicants will be contacted with additional details as the pilot launch approaches.

Apply if you are seeking:
• Confidence before bedside practice
• A safe space to practice and learn
• Preparation beyond exam readiness
• Intentional, compassionate nursing development

This pilot cohort will focus on:
• Building clinical confidence through intentional practice
• Developing a calm, prepared bedside presence
• Strengthening communication in real-world scenarios
• Learning how to anticipate patient needs with clarity and purpose
• Connecting compassion to safe, high-quality care

Who This Is For
• Final-semester nursing students
• Newly licensed graduate nurses
• Nurses within their first year of practice
• Individuals seeking confidence before stepping fully into bedside roles

This program is not:
• A leadership certification
• A coaching program
• A replacement for hospital orientation
• A performance evaluation

Pilot Note (Important) 

This is an early-stage pilot experience. Space is limited to ensure a focused, supportive learning environment.

“WHAT YOU’LL BUILD”

What You’ll Build in The Transition Room
• Confidence entering patient rooms with intention
• Critical thinking in real clinical situations
• Clear, respectful bedside communication
• Compassion that remains present under pressure
• Awareness of patient safety, dignity, and quality care
• Emotional readiness for the realities of nursing

Outcomes We’re Working Toward

As an early-stage program, The Transition Room is designed to support outcomes that matter to nurses, patients, and care teams.

We aim to support:
• Nurses who feel prepared, not overwhelmed at the bedside
• Increased confidence and clinical readiness
• Stronger patient connection and communication
• Greater focus on intentional, safe care
• Reduced early-career stress and self-doubt
• A new generation of nurses who see patients as people first

This is where habits are formed; before fear, burnout, or hesitation take root.