PRESENTING SUPERB RESEARCH THAT ADVANCES THE FIELD OF EDUCATION
The Little Shelter That Could
Literacy Resilience of Mothers and Children Facing Homelessness
- Publisher
Myers Education Press - ISBN 9781975509590
- Language English
- Pages 200 pp.
- Size 6" x 9"
- Request Exam Copy
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- Publisher
Myers Education Press - ISBN 9781975509606
- Language English
- Pages 200 pp.
- Size 6" x 9"
- Request E-Exam Copy
The Little Shelter That Could: Literacy Resilience of Mothers and Children Facing Homelessness tells the story of homelessness, life in a shelter, and the impact of these factors on children’s lives and education. It is also a story of hope. Dr. Sadia Warsi discovered something remarkable during her research at Riverside Shelter. Instead of educational disruption, she found literacy resilience. Families created sophisticated learning environments that challenged assumptions about capabilities during crisis. The Little Shelter That Could reveals extraordinary educational leadership, where children became teachers in hallway spaces and mothers transformed dormitories into literacy-rich environments. Through anonymized, reconstructed narrative case studies based on her research, this book documents how education served as both anchor during crisis and pathway to future possibilities. Rather than focusing on deficits, this work illuminates sophisticated educational knowledge families possess during vulnerable moments. Readers encounter stories of mothers who strategically selected books to accelerate their children's reading while in emergency housing, families who created "learning corners" that became the shelter's educational heart, and parents whose daily bus journeys maintained their children's school enrollment. Written for early childhood educators and teacher candidates, this book provides frameworks for recognizing family educational assets invisible to traditional assessments. Dr. Warsi challenges deficit-based approaches, offering asset-based strategies that build on what families already know. Drawing from extensive experience in special education and multicultural competency, Warsi provides trauma-informed approaches that honor family expertise while supporting growth. Twenty-five years after the initial study, these lessons remain urgently relevant, as housing instability affects an increasing number of families. The Little Shelter That Could offers hope, practical strategies, and a transformative vision for early childhood education that honors every family's educational assets.
Perfect for courses such as: Foundations of Early Childhood Education; Family and Community Engagement in Education; Culturally Responsive Teaching; Early Childhood Literacy Development; Trauma-Informed Educational Practices; Introduction to Special Education; Assessment in Early Childhood Education; Supporting Diverse Families; Child Development and Learning; and Educational Equity and Social Justice
Sadia Warsi
Dr. Sadia Warsi is a Professor of Special Education at National Louis University in Chicago, with over two decades of experience in special education and inclusive teaching. She earned her PhD in Special Education from the University of Illinois at Chicago, focusing on emergent literacy development of homeless children. Her expertise encompasses differentiated instruction, equitable learning environments, trauma-informed instruction, and multicultural competency. Dr. Warsi's research centers on poverty and literacy, literacy development in diverse environments, and experiences of refugee children in inclusive settings. She teaches courses in early childhood education, special education assessment, literacy instruction, and family collaboration. 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 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. Before her academic career, Dr. Warsi taught in Chicago Public Schools as both an inclusion and self-contained special education teacher, giving her practical classroom experience that informs her university teaching and research. She has received the Excellence in Teaching Award from National Louis University.