Finding Mentorship as a New Grad Traveler

You don't have a formal residency — here's how to build clinical skills on the road.

The Mentorship Gap

The #1 concern new grads have about travel therapy is mentorship. In a permanent position, you'd have a consistent supervisor, structured onboarding, maybe a residency program. As a traveler, you're expected to be productive from week one.

The reality is nuanced: you won't have a formal mentor, but you'll have access to experienced clinicians at every facility who can teach you — if you proactively seek them out.

Strategies That Work

1. Choose Facilities Strategically

Ask your recruiter: "How many therapists are on staff?" and "Is there a DOR or senior therapist available?" Facilities with 3+ therapists provide informal mentorship naturally. Solo-therapist positions are the worst for new grads needing guidance.

This is another reason to choose your agency carefully. A recruiter who is a therapist themselves will understand why this matters and steer you toward supportive facilities. Large agencies filling slots may not prioritize this.

2. Be the Person Who Asks Questions

At every facility, identify the most experienced permanent therapist and learn from them. Most are happy to share knowledge — they just need you to ask. "How would you approach this patient?" is one of the most powerful questions in clinical practice.

3. Invest in Continuing Education Early

Don't wait for your CE requirements to come due. Take practical courses in your first year: manual therapy, specialty evaluation courses, documentation workshops. Many agencies provide $500-$1,500/year in CEU stipends.

4. Build a Resource Library

Keep notes from each assignment — evaluation frameworks, treatment protocols, documentation templates. By your third contract, you'll have a personal clinical reference that makes you effective immediately at any new facility.

5. Find a Remote Mentor

Connect with experienced therapists online. Travel therapy Facebook groups, Instagram communities, and professional forums are full of veterans willing to answer clinical questions. Some agencies offer clinical support hotlines for complex cases.

Your Agency's Role

Some agencies provide better clinical support than others. Ask potential agencies: "What clinical resources do you offer?" and "Is there a clinical team I can call with questions?"

Smaller, therapist-owned agencies often have an edge here — the owners have clinical backgrounds and can provide guidance that non-clinical recruiters at large agencies cannot. When you call with a clinical concern, talking to someone who's actually treated patients makes a difference.

Want Supportive Placement?

Connect with professionals who specialize in placing new grad travelers.