“This book helped our teachers rethink how we create space for student identity and agency. It is both inspiring and immediately usable.”
John SmithMelbourne
Through her consulting practice, Dr. Jaber has collaborated with schools, districts, and professional organizations to support identity-affirming instruction and equitable learning systems.

Dr. Jaber has led consulting projects across the following key areas:
When Dr. Sawsan Jaber was invited to partner with a midwestern school district, leaders knew that students felt unseen, but they weren’t sure how to change the system. Suspensions were disproportionate, lessons rarely reflected students’ identities, and families of color reported feeling disconnected from the school community.
Rather than beginning with a pre-packaged program, Dr. Jaber started with listening — to students, families, and educators — and then co-constructed an equity-centered roadmap that honored local context while drawing on research-based practices.
This case study highlights how centering student voice and identity reshaped teaching, leadership, and culture across the district.
In the first phase, Dr. Jaber facilitated student focus groups, community listening circles, and classroom observations. Students shared stories of being misrepresented in curriculum, over-policed in classrooms, and rarely invited into meaningful decision-making.
These narratives became the foundation for a district-wide equity strategy anchored in four domains of student agency drawn from Pedagogies of Voice: Identity, Belonging, Inquiry, and Efficacy.
Many districts collect feedback and call it “student voice.” Dr. Jaber’s approach insists that listening is only transformative when it leads to shared power and structural change.
Working alongside teachers, administrators, and students, she mapped where decisions were being made about students rather than with them. Together, they identified leverage points in curriculum, discipline policies, and professional learning where voice could move from symbolic to substantive.
When Dr. Sawsan Jaber was invited to partner with a midwestern school district, leaders knew that students felt unseen, but they weren’t sure how to change the system. Suspensions were disproportionate, lessons rarely reflected students’ identities, and families of color reported feeling disconnected from the school community.
Rather than beginning with a pre-packaged program, Dr. Jaber started with listening — to students, families, and educators — and then co-constructed an equity-centered roadmap that honored local context while drawing on research-based practices.
This case study highlights how centering student voice and identity reshaped teaching, leadership, and culture across the district.
In the first phase, Dr. Jaber facilitated student focus groups, community listening circles, and classroom observations. Students shared stories of being misrepresented in curriculum, over-policed in classrooms, and rarely invited into meaningful decision-making.
These narratives became the foundation for a district-wide equity strategy anchored in four domains of student agency drawn from Pedagogies of Voice: Identity, Belonging, Inquiry, and Efficacy.
Many districts collect feedback and call it “student voice.” Dr. Jaber’s approach insists that listening is only transformative when it leads to shared power and structural change.
Working alongside teachers, administrators, and students, she mapped where decisions were being made about students rather than with them. Together, they identified leverage points in curriculum, discipline policies, and professional learning where voice could move from symbolic to substantive.
When Dr. Sawsan Jaber was invited to partner with a midwestern school district, leaders knew that students felt unseen, but they weren’t sure how to change the system. Suspensions were disproportionate, lessons rarely reflected students’ identities, and families of color reported feeling disconnected from the school community.
Rather than beginning with a pre-packaged program, Dr. Jaber started with listening — to students, families, and educators — and then co-constructed an equity-centered roadmap that honored local context while drawing on research-based practices.
This case study highlights how centering student voice and identity reshaped teaching, leadership, and culture across the district.
In the first phase, Dr. Jaber facilitated student focus groups, community listening circles, and classroom observations. Students shared stories of being misrepresented in curriculum, over-policed in classrooms, and rarely invited into meaningful decision-making.
These narratives became the foundation for a district-wide equity strategy anchored in four domains of student agency drawn from Pedagogies of Voice: Identity, Belonging, Inquiry, and Efficacy.
Many districts collect feedback and call it “student voice.” Dr. Jaber’s approach insists that listening is only transformative when it leads to shared power and structural change.
Working alongside teachers, administrators, and students, she mapped where decisions were being made about students rather than with them. Together, they identified leverage points in curriculum, discipline policies, and professional learning where voice could move from symbolic to substantive.
Dr. Jaber has led consulting projects across the following key areas:
Professional learning and consulting on equity, identity, culturally responsive teaching, and curriculum design.
Including Binghamton College, Morton College, Northern Illinois University, and Syracuse Public Schools (university–district professional development partnerships).
Including:
National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) – Committee and Caucus leadership
Book Love Foundation – Advisory Board
International Science and Technology in Education Education – Leadership roles
Arab American Education Network – Founder
Our Voice Alliance – Board Member
Teacher Advisory Group, Illinois State Board of Education
National Board Equity Standards Writing Committee
Google Technology Equity Framework – Advisor
Share your details below to request availability, speaking rates, or a customized session that meets your community’s needs.
When Dr. Sawsan Jaber was invited to partner with a midwestern school district, leaders knew that students felt unseen, but they weren’t sure how to change the system. Suspensions were disproportionate, lessons rarely reflected students’ identities, and families of color reported feeling disconnected from the school community.
Rather than beginning with a pre-packaged program, Dr. Jaber started with listening — to students, families, and educators — and then co-constructed an equity-centered roadmap that honored local context while drawing on research-based practices.
This case study highlights how centering student voice and identity reshaped teaching, leadership, and culture across the district.
In the first phase, Dr. Jaber facilitated student focus groups, community listening circles, and classroom observations. Students shared stories of being misrepresented in curriculum, over-policed in classrooms, and rarely invited into meaningful decision-making.
These narratives became the foundation for a district-wide equity strategy anchored in four domains of student agency drawn from Pedagogies of Voice: Identity, Belonging, Inquiry, and Efficacy.
Many districts collect feedback and call it “student voice.” Dr. Jaber’s approach insists that listening is only transformative when it leads to shared power and structural change.
Working alongside teachers, administrators, and students, she mapped where decisions were being made about students rather than with them. Together, they identified leverage points in curriculum, discipline policies, and professional learning where voice could move from symbolic to substantive.