Trinity Lutheran Seminary

A Developmental View of Internship

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1st through 3rd months
ARRIVAL
  • What is this new place like?
  • Feelings of dependence, aloneness, marginality, discomfort, stage fright, and illy-defined role.
  • How long will I feel as though I were a guest?
  • Trying to keep eyes and ears open.  Experiencing much fatigue along with starry-eyed romance.
  • Pastor/Supervisor seen as interpreter, source of support, power, and authority.

FORMATION OF CONTRACT
  • Tendency to focus on those things I have not done or areas in which I know I am weak.  Harder to hear what the congregation needs and what the church-at-large expects.

“SINK OR SWIM” STAGE
  • Troublesome musings:  Shall I leave?  Can I handle this?  Do I wish to handle this?  Should I be here? Am I doing any good? Am I worth what they’re paying me?


4th through 6th months
  • Self-perception: learner, receiver, contributor.  Sufficiently at ease really to learn.  Forming own opinions, circle of friends.
  • Making suggestions, but still looking for direction.
  • Risking occasional challenge of the “local tradition” and/or the supervisor’s views or methods of ministry.  May even begin to see the supervisor as a co-learner.
  • Post-Christmas: Do I have the Winter blahs?  Seasonal depression?  Cumulative fatigue?
  • Questions: Does Internship really need to be a full 12 months?  What needs to change to make another half year here valuable, defensible, bearable?  Should I actually be paid for something I so much enjoy doing?  Who might my successor be?


7th through 10th months
  • Critical months: some settle for a stalemate or allow for deterioration in working relationships; some settle for “no change” and simply do “more of the same”; some move to a restructured, self-motivated stage.
  • Signs of the latter: feel you have a purpose here; do more on your own; integrating values and methodologies; focusing on strengths and how you use them; transition from solo skills to community-building skills; have worked through savior-complex; better able to handle “lows”; reinforced by positive feedback; better balance of professional and personal life; appreciate strengths of supervisor; able to identify limitations of supervisor


11th and 12th months
  • Often quite tumultuous
  • Covering for Pastor’s vacation and experiencing an attendant ego-lift
  • Aware that time is running out
  • Fielding requests for “still want to have you over”
  • Anticipatory grief over leaving
  • Temptation to protect self from the greater hurt by no longer investing self fully in the ministry and related relationships
  • Doing final evaluations
  • Suffering through the joys and sorrows of leave-taking
  • A strange mix of feelings