FRISCO, Texas -- It seems everybody else is wondering what the Dallas Cowboys will do when Tony Romo is completely healthy, except Dak Prescott.

Romo has been back to full practice for a week and did more Wednesday than he has done since suffering a compression fracture on Aug. 25.

"Nothing changes for me," Prescott said. "I'm the same guy no matter from now to the point I was a third-string guy coming into OTAs. Nothing changes. Nothing's going to be different from the way I approach the game."

Prescott carries the confidence not just from compiling a 7-1 record, 12 touchdown passes to just two interceptions, four rushing touchdowns, the fourth-best passer rating in the NFL and the Cowboys' rookie records for touchdowns, yards (2,020), completions (165) and wins. He carries a belief in himself.

He smirks at the weekly questions about Romo's return. It's not to be cocky, but he sees through them the way he sees through a defense. As much as everybody might think there will be a divide in the locker room, players swear nothing is brewing.

Why does Prescott smirk at the questions?

"Because I mean I'm not going to change what the situation is," Prescott said. "It's my love and my passion for this game. The way that I approach it, I don't care who's the other guy or what's going on around me, what the record is, what my last performance was, it's all about how I can get better in my next play."

Romo has helped Prescott immensely. Most of it has come on game day, but Romo has helped the rookie during the last two weeks in the meeting room, too.

"He looks good," Prescott said of Romo. "He's been looking good for the past two weeks, rehabbing and getting himself together and coming back from the injury. Yeah, he's looked good."

Romo went through his first full practice on Wednesday since getting hurt. He is expected to do the same today and this week. It is possible he could be active Sunday against the Pittsburgh Steelers. If it is not this week, then it would have to be Nov. 20 against the Baltimore Ravens.

Prescott has not campaigned for the job. He has given largely the same answer about this being Romo's team every time he has been asked.

On Wednesday he was asked if he thinks he has done enough to remain the starter.

"I don't really think about if I've done enough or what I've done," Prescott said. "I just think about coming in each and every day and working my butt off in practice, giving this team a chance throughout the week so we can go out there and have a chance to win on Sunday."