Career
She maintained and expanded the school, despite continuous opposition from her community. Azmudeh married an officer in the army when she was fourteen. Her husband supported her continued education, which she pursued both independently and with the help of language tutors.
In 1907 or 1911, a group of women met in Tehran to discuss and work towards improving the education of girls in Iran.
At the time, girls were not usually educated outside of their homes. After this meeting, Azmudeh opened the first Iranian school for girls in Iran, called the She ran the school in her home in Tehran, where she taught twenty girls.
As it was not a state-run school, Azmudeh was responsible for protecting it herself. She and her pupils received considerable criticism from the community and the government.
Her pupils were criticized for studying outside of their own homes, and accused of being prostitutes.
Azmudeh continuously received threats, both to her life and to the school, and was denigrated as immoral. Azmudeh later began to also offer literacy classes to adult women. Azmudeh has been credited for inspiring other female educators in Iran.
A number of her pupils later studied to become secondary school teachers themselves.