Following her PhD and postdoctoral fellowship at
Harvard–Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, In the same year, Hazari won Best Paper in the Education Research and Methods Division at the American Society for Engineering Education Conference. Hazari eventually left Clemson to accept a similar faculty appointment at
Florida International University (FIU). While at Florida International University Hazari's research goals hope to improve the environment in physics for minoritized groups, namely women. At Florida International University she has taught courses in "physics, mathematics(calculus), science methods for pre-service/in-service teachers, history of science as well as mathematics and research methods for graduate students." During her early tenure at the school, she collaborated with Jennifer D. Cribbs, Philip M. Sadler, and Gerhard Sonnert to publish
Establishing an Explanatory Model for Mathematics Identity. The result of the journal suggested that interest and recognition were stronger factors in help students become "math persons" than confidence. Two years later, she received NSF funding to establish a programme that develops material to add to high-school curricula to inspire female students to pursue physics at university. The programme, called STEP UP, was run in collaboration with Texas A&M University-Commerce, the
American Physical Society (APS), and the American Association of Physics Teachers. During the
COVID-19 pandemic, Hazari was elected a fellow of the APS for "identifying and dismantling barriers women and people of diverse backgrounds face in
STEM fields." Furthermore she has served on multiple committees and editorial boards for her success in research. == Research ==