PRESENTING SUPERB RESEARCH THAT ADVANCES THE FIELD OF EDUCATION
Faith, Family, and Neurodiversity
Islamic Approaches to Understanding Autism
- Publisher
Myers Education Press - ISBN 9781975509712
- Language English
- Pages 175 pp.
- Size 6" x 9"
- Request Exam Copy
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- Publisher
Myers Education Press - ISBN 9781975509729
- Language English
- Pages 175 pp.
- Size 6" x 9"
- Request E-Exam Copy
Muslim families raising children with autism navigate complex intersections of faith, culture, and disability services that remain largely unexamined in special education literature. In a first for that academic literature, Faith, Family, and Neurodiversity: Islamic Approaches to Understanding Autism addresses this critical gap by centering the voices and expertise of Muslim families who have developed sophisticated strategies for supporting their children while maintaining religious identity and cultural values within American educational systems.
Drawing on extensive community engagement and research, Dr. Sadia Warsi documents how Islamic principles provide conceptual frameworks for understanding autism that align with contemporary special education values while offering additional resources for family resilience. Through composite narratives that protect participant confidentiality, this volume examines how families successfully integrate Islamic wisdom with evidence-based interventions to create comprehensive support programs.
The analysis reveals systematic gaps in how educational institutions serve culturally diverse families, while each chapter integrates young adult literature featuring Muslim characters or autism themes as pedagogical tools for building cultural competence. This volume challenges prevailing assumptions about cultural values and evidence-based practice, offering a strengths-based perspective on cultural diversity in special education.
Faith, Family, and Neurodiversity provides essential content for special educators, school psychologists, administrators, teacher preparation faculty, and educational researchers committed to creating truly inclusive educational systems.
The goal of the book is to become a foundational document in the study of this unique but important phenomenon. It can be adopted in a variety of neurodiversity or cultural studies classes, and it is essential reading for special education teachers, especially those dealing with issues of health in diverse cultures.
Perfect for courses such as: Introduction to Special Education; Culturally Responsive Teaching in Special Education; Family Engagement in Special Education; Foundations of Inclusive Education; Autism Spectrum Disorders: Theory and Practice; Multicultural Education; Diversity in Early Childhood Special Education; Critical Perspectives in Disability Studies; Educational Equity and Social Justice; Collaboration with Families and Communities
Sadia Warsi
Dr. Sadia Warsi serves as Professor of Special Education at National Louis University in Chicago, where she brings over two decades of experience in special education and inclusive teaching to her work with graduate students. Her international background spanning India, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and Canada shapes her pedagogical approach and research perspective, enabling her to develop culturally sustaining practices that honor students' multifaceted identities.
Dr. Warsi earned her Ph.D. in Special Education from the University of Illinois at Chicago, focusing on emergent literacy development of homeless children. She also holds degrees from the University of Manitoba and The American University. Her expertise encompasses differentiated instruction, equitable learning environments, trauma-informed instruction, and multicultural competency.
At National Louis University, Dr. Warsi teaches graduate courses in early childhood special education, curricular adaptations, and critical literacy instruction, mentoring future educators to integrate cultural competence with inclusive pedagogy. Her commitment to excellence in teaching has been recognized through the Excellence in Teaching Award from National Louis University. She has published extensively on refugee students with disabilities, Muslim representation in children's literature, trauma-informed practices, and family engagement in special education. Her books include Beyond Labels: Understanding Refugee Students with Disabilities in Educational Contexts (Myers Education Press, 2025) and The Little Shelter That Could: Literacy Resilience of Mothers and Children Facing Homelessness (Myers Education Press, 2026).
Before her academic career, she taught in Chicago Public Schools as both an inclusion and self-contained special education teacher, experience that continues to ground her university teaching and research in classroom realities.
Sophia Memon
Sophia Memon attends Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism with the intention of completing a Master’s degree at that institution. In 2004, she founded ApplyWise, a college consulting business. In addition, she is an Outreach & Marketing Intern at Amanda Ori PsyD and Associates. She plans to pursue careers and opportunities in both journalism and psychology.