Creating Sustainable Collaborative Spaces for Professional Growth: A Cross-Institutional Study in Higher Education
Abstract
1. Introduction
“I needed a space where I could grow professionally despite not being at the same institution as others.”
1.1. Teacher Educators’ Professional Self-Understanding and Development: A CHAT Perspective
1.2. Action Research in Teacher Education: A Vygotskian Approach
1.3. Collaborative Action Research as a Cultural Activity System
1.4. Creating a Collaborative Space: A “Third Space” for Professional Development
1.5. CHAT and Sustainable Educational Transformation
1.6. Research Questions
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Research Context and Participants
2.2. Research Design and Theoretical Framework
2.3. ESD-Informed Research Design and Sustainability Considerations
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
2.5.1. Analytical Process
2.5.2. Implementation
2.5.3. Validation and Trustworthiness
3. Results
3.1. Building Common Ground Through Productive Contradictions: Negotiating Shared Objects and Tools
- One member reflected:
Despite coming from different institutions with different expectations and cultures, we were able to find common ground in our shared passion for improving our practice as teacher educators. This common ground became the foundation for our collaborative work [...] I, along with my fellow group members, had a deep passion to learn and more fully internalize the methods of action research and to experience them firsthand. For me, action research has become a central tool that has shaped the way I view reality and has influenced my practice as an educator.
During a group discussion, I heard from a teacher educator at another institution that her expectations of students were markedly different, even opposite to mine. This experience was deeply unsettling and prompted a process of critical reflection, leading me to ask: What implicit messages am I conveying to my students?
I felt a sense of frustration when comparing myself to the rapid pace of my colleagues; they advanced in their research faster than I did. In retrospect, I realize that the group meetings and the exposure to my colleagues’ working processes both stimulated the need and gave me the capacity to advance professionally as a researcher.
3.2. Creating a Collaborative Space Built on Trust: Establishing Rules and Community
- One member wrote:
The trust we built allowed us to be vulnerable with each other, to share our struggles and uncertainties without fear of judgment. This trust became a crucial mediating factor in our professional development.
3.2.1. Critical Recognition
For the first time, I began presenting my action research at academic conferences. It was only through my participation in this community that I found the courage to attend a conference where I was required to present in a language that is not my mother tongue. My group members advised me and rehearsed my presentation with me. They even attended the conference, to listen and offer their support, which created a profound sense of solidarity.
3.2.2. Sustainability Through Shared Ownership
We established a tradition that if someone could not attend a meeting, we would all search together for an alternative time, making every effort to adjust our schedules so that everyone could be present and every voice could be heard. As a result, my commitment to this community fundamentally reshaped my personal and professional priorities.
3.3. Individual and Collective Professional Development: Expansive Learning
Through our collaborative process, I’ve developed new understandings of my practice that I couldn’t have achieved on my own. For example, writing in my research journal, sharing it with colleagues, and reading their journals transformed this activity into an integral part of my daily work. The diverse perspectives and experiences within the group opened new directions for me.
3.3.1. Concrete Manifestations
3.3.2. Long-Term Sustainability
Even after completing the documentation and writing phase of my action research, I continued to consult with my community colleagues on a variety of issues. I deliberately make time for these meetings because they are deeply meaningful to me and essential for my ongoing professional development.
3.4. Developing Sustainability Competencies Through Cross-Institutional Collaboration
4. Discussion
4.1. Key Findings and Theoretical Contributions
4.2. Implications for ESD Integration in Higher Education
4.3. Practical Implications
4.3.1. For Teacher Education Institutions
4.3.2. For Teacher Educators
4.3.3. For Research Communities
4.3.4. Sustainability Framework
4.4. Limitations and Future Research Directions
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| CHAT | Cultural–historical activity theory |
| ZPD | Zone of proximal development |
| ESD | Education for sustainable development |
| SDG | Sustainable development goals |
| PAR | Participatory action research |
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Lapidot-Lefler, N.; Katz, G.; Horowitz, H. Creating Sustainable Collaborative Spaces for Professional Growth: A Cross-Institutional Study in Higher Education. Sustainability 2025, 17, 10790. https://doi.org/10.3390/su172310790
Lapidot-Lefler N, Katz G, Horowitz H. Creating Sustainable Collaborative Spaces for Professional Growth: A Cross-Institutional Study in Higher Education. Sustainability. 2025; 17(23):10790. https://doi.org/10.3390/su172310790
Chicago/Turabian StyleLapidot-Lefler, Noam, Gilat Katz, and Hagit Horowitz. 2025. "Creating Sustainable Collaborative Spaces for Professional Growth: A Cross-Institutional Study in Higher Education" Sustainability 17, no. 23: 10790. https://doi.org/10.3390/su172310790
APA StyleLapidot-Lefler, N., Katz, G., & Horowitz, H. (2025). Creating Sustainable Collaborative Spaces for Professional Growth: A Cross-Institutional Study in Higher Education. Sustainability, 17(23), 10790. https://doi.org/10.3390/su172310790

