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Faith, Family, and Neurodiversity: Islamic Approaches to Understanding Autism

Contributor(s): Warsi, Sadia (Author), Memon, Sophia (Author)

ISBN: 9781975509712

Publisher: Myers Education Press

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Pub Date: May 4, 2026

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.55" H x 9.00" L x 6.04" W ( 0.69 lbs) 175 pages

Series: From Disability to Ability

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: 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 and Ms. Sophia Memon document 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 characters with exceptionalities, including autism, 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

Brief description: Dr. Warsi brings extensive expertise in special education and culturally responsive pedagogy to this collaborative work. Her expertise in inclusive education, minority parent involvement in special education and emergent literacy development began during her early teaching years in Chicago Public Schools, where she worked with students in both inclusion and self-contained special education classrooms. As a dedicated educator and researcher, Dr. Warsi has developed comprehensive approaches to supporting diverse learners, particularly those facing significant challenges.

Dr. Warsi's research focuses on children who face significant challenges: those experiencing homelessness, refugee students with disabilities, and families navigating both poverty and special education systems. Her work explores how these children and their families develop resilience and maintain hope through literacy. This research foundation directly informs the culturally sensitive and strength-based approaches presented throughout this current work on autism and Islamic perspectives.

Dr. Warsi has published extensively on refugee students with disabilities, Muslim representation in children's literature, trauma-informed instruction, and family engagement in special education. Her book Beyond Labels: Understanding Refugee Students with Disabilities in Educational Contexts was published by Myers Education Press in 2025. She presents nationally and internationally on inclusive classroom design and cultural responsiveness in education. She is also the author of The Little Shelter That Could: Literacy Resilience of Mothers and Children Facing Homelessness (Myers Education Press, 2026), and Faith, Family, and Neurodiversity: Islamic Approaches to Understanding Autism (Myers Education Press, 2026).

Dr. Warsi's teaching portfolio encompasses a comprehensive range of courses that directly inform the culturally responsive educational frameworks presented in this book. These include Frameworks, Perspectives and Collaboration in Special Education, Methods of Social/Emotional Support, and Literacy Across the Curriculum for Students with Disabilities offered in both online and face-to-face formats. Additional courses focus on Literacy Instruction for Diverse Learners and Differentiated and Individualized Curriculum and Instruction, providing essential foundations for inclusive educational practices. She has received the Excellence in Teaching Award from National Louis University, recognizing her commitment to preparing future educators with culturally responsive pedagogical approaches.

Review Quotes: "As a therapist, I see every day how deeply the need for belonging shapes the well-being of children and families. Faith, Family, and Neurodiversity offers a compassionate, human exploration of autism through the voices of Muslim families, highlighting both shared experiences and important cultural differences. This book gently shows how faith, family, and community can be sources of strength rather than barriers. It helps readers understand how misunderstanding and exclusion impact families, and why being truly seen matters. Clear, thoughtful, and respectful, this book expands empathy and understanding, and reminds us that meaningful support begins with belonging, dignity, and connection."--Sheema Khan, Registered Psychotherapist, Master of Arts in Counselling Psychology & MBA, Ontario, Canada

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