You’ve put in the work: structured think time, task-based activities, and anonymous tools. Your sessions feel smoother, but how do you know if your team is truly engaged—or just going through the motions?
Not all participation signals real engagement. Phil Schlechty reminds us that compliance is not the same as commitment, and James Paul Gee highlights that deep engagement happens in meaningful, purposeful spaces.
Psychological safety isn’t a “vibe”—it’s measurable through behaviors and patterns that signal deeper trust. Here’s how to track whether your strategies are fostering genuine engagement over time.
Schlechty identifies three levels of engagement:
What to Look For:
Practical Strategy: Pair anonymous input with open reflection.
Why It Works:
You’re assessing not just whether people participate but why. Authentic engagement reflects higher psychological safety.
James Paul Gee argues that people engage most deeply when their work is situated in meaningful, real-world contexts.
The Signal: Engagement happens when team members feel their contributions matter beyond the meeting.
What to Look For:
Practical Strategy: Frame tasks in real-world context.
Instead of asking, “How can we improve the workflow?”, connect the task to purpose:
“What change would make this workflow serve our team better tomorrow?”
Why It Works:
When team members see their work as part of a larger, meaningful system, they engage authentically, not just strategically.
Teams engage in different ways depending on the setting. James Paul Gee’s affinity spaces concept teaches us that people thrive when they can contribute in ways aligned with their identities, skills, and comfort levels.
What to Look For:
Practical Strategy: Diversify the ways team members can engage.
Why It Works:
Providing multiple pathways to participate aligns with team members’ strengths, making it easier to engage authentically.
Participation trends tell part of the story, but it’s important to check in directly about psychological safety.
Practical Example: Regular, anonymous check-ins.
Why It Works:
It provides clear signals about trust without putting team members on the spot.
True engagement doesn’t stop when the meeting ends. Schlechty’s “authentic engagement” is evident when team members take ownership of next steps.
What to Look For:
Practical Strategy: Reflect on progress in follow-up meetings.
Why It Works:
Sustained engagement and ownership are clear signs of trust and psychological safety.
Not all participation is created equal. By assessing engagement through Schlechty’s levels, Gee’s purposeful spaces, and concrete behavioral patterns, you’ll know if your trust-building strategies are moving the needle.
The next post will bring the series full circle: practical ways to reframe icebreakers as tools for teams who already trust each other—so they enhance connection instead of breaking it.