Sabria Jawhar

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Born4 August
Madinah, Saudi Arabia
OccupationsJournalist, academic
Sabria S. Jawhar
Jawhar in 2009
Born4 August
Madinah, Saudi Arabia
OccupationsJournalist, academic
Websitesaudiwriter.blogspot.com

Sabria Salama Murjan Jawhar (born 4 August, year unknown) is a Saudi Arabian journalist and columnist for the Jeddah-based Arab News. She has an expertise in Arabic/English linguistics. She also writes for English-language news outlets, including The Huffington Post,[1] and serves as an assistant professor in the field of applied linguistics.[citation needed] In 2010, Jawhar was named by the Dubai-based Arabian Business magazine as one of the "World's Most Influential Arabs" by ranking her No. 94 in its "Power 100" list. The magazine also listed her in 2011 as one of the "100 Most Powerful Arab Women".[2][3]

Jawhar was born in Madinah to Salama Jawhar and Alia Muhmmad Al-Atayyah. She is the seventh of 11 children with six brothers and four sisters. Her father retired after 40 years in the Ministry of the Interior in the prisons sector and established a furniture-making business. Her brother Asaad Jawhar is a petroleum economics analyst and lecturer at King Abdul Aziz University.

Education and early career

Following her graduation from high school she attended King Abdul Aziz University in Madinah where she earned a bachelor of arts degree in English language and literature. She earned her master's degree in Applied Linguistics at Umm Al-Qura University in Makkah.

Jawhar worked briefly as an English language teacher at Al-Wastah High School in Madinah, before assuming duties as an English language teacher and language lab supervisor at Al-Abrar Private High School. In 2003, she taught English language conversation courses at Al-Sebai Medical Training Institute in Madinah. In 2006, she served as a lecturer at King Saud bin Abdulaziz University for Health Sciences, Nursing College, in Jeddah. In 2009, she became an associate fellow in the British Academy of Higher Education. She also served as a lecturer for the Saudi Ministry of Education.

Jawhar was a panelist at the U.S. State Department-sponsored International Research and Exchanges (IREX) board conference for Middle East bloggers in Dubai in 2009.

Journalism career

Politics

References

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