Empowering students with language-based learning differences

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The Siena School Blog
Discover, Learn, Celebrate, and Empower
Welcome to Siena's blog, your source for helpful, cutting-edge resources tailored to teachers, parents, and other advocates in the learning differences community. We are dedicated to providing a wealth of curated knowledge spanning various topics, ranging from dyslexia advocacy and awareness to classroom teaching strategies, heritage month profiles, and social and emotional health.
AAPI Heritage Month 2025: Books and Podcasts of Interest

Siena is celebrating Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month 2025 by highlighting some recent books and podcasts of interest from diverse Asian, Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander voices.
In addition to the book and podcast recommendations below, readers can also check the Smithsonian Institution or Federal Asian Pacific American Council (FAPAC) for relevant resources, local events, and more.
Contemporary Books by AAPI Authors
Here are some additional recent fiction and nonfiction books by AAPI authors:
- At the Edge of Empire: A Family’s Reckoning with China — Edward Wong
- The Emperor and the Endless Palace — Justinian Huang
- Interior Chinatown — Charles Yu (recently adapted for Hulu)
- The Emperor of Gladness — Ocean Vuong
- When I’m Gone, Look for Me in the East — Quan Barry
Looking for more book recommendations? Penguin Random House, The New York Public Library, and More Than Words have lists to choose from.
DC-area independent Loyalty Bookstores is a diverse, woman-owned business that often shares bookseller picks and hosts monthly author events (see here) consistent with their mission of highlighting all literary voices.
Readers interested in visual arts from AAPI creators can look up Dwight Hwang (who specializes in classic and contemporary gyotaku) or Jamie Noguchi (who has illustrated contemporary comics and other media).

AAPI Podcasts of Interest
Here are some current podcasts from AAPI voices about various topics of interest:
- Asian American History 101
- Asian Americana
- Dear Asian Americans
- Self Evident: Asian America's Stories
- See also Best Asian American Podcasts and 70 Best Asian American Podcasts You Must Follow in 2025 for more
Georgetown University and the University of Pennsylvania have podcast recommendations and other resources.

Siena Blog and Resources
See our blog for recent heritage month posts from Women’s History Month 2025, Black History Month 2025, and Hispanic Heritage Month 2024.
The Siena School proudly serves students with dyslexia and other language-based learning differences in grades 3-12 on campuses in Silver Spring, Maryland (grades 3-4 and 5-12), and Oakton, Virginia (grades 3-12).
Spotlight on Ann Hu

“The brains of some people are just wired differently. They just need a different system of teaching”—so says a character in Ann Hu’s independent film Confetti (2020), which tells the story of a mother and her daughter traveling from China to New York in search of a school that meets her learning needs.

To commemorate Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, Siena is spotlighting independent film Director Ann Hu. Her most recent film is the partly autobiographical Confetti, which combines issues surrounding dyslexia and immigration with the diverse identities and experiences related to Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month.
Confetti continues the cultural contributions Hu has made through her other films, Shadow Magic (2000) and Beauty Remains (2005). Her work has gotten awards and nominations at film festivals in China, Taiwan, and Japan.
Here’s a short synopsis of Hu’s three films:
- Confetti has a contemporary setting and tells the story of a mother taking her dyslexic daughter from a small town in China to New York in search of a school that meets her learning needs. Based partly on Hu’s own experiences with her daughter Michelle, Confetti shows Meimei in school doing multisensory learning and other methods used in LD classrooms, as well as uses visuals to represent how Meimei sees words and letters.
- Shadow Magic is set in Beijing, China, in 1902 and tells the story of a Chinese photographer and British innovator trying to introduce the modern technology of film into a traditional Chinese society.
- Beauty Remains is set in Qingdao, China, in 1948 and follows the lives of two sisters as they deal with their late father’s will and legacy, as well as a common love interest that complicates their relationship.

As a 2021 article on the underdiagnosis of learning differences in Asian American community quotes Hu, “Seeing how Michelle struggled in the classroom and struggled to finish her homework after school between 3:00pm and 11:00pm every day was truly a heartbreaking experience for me. Often Michelle would pretend that she understood the question just to help me feel less stressed.”
Learn More About Ann Hu
- See Confetti’s official website and rundown of its cast and crew, as well as its official YouTube channel for related content and interviews.
- Read this profile in Deadline (from 2017) to learn more about Hu’s background, reception of her earlier films, and cultural and creative differences between China and the U.S.
- Listen to Hu on The Filmmakers Podcast discussing Confetti and her overall approach to independent filmmaking.
- Read Hu’s Interview with Medium, “5 Things Parents Can Do To Help Their Children Thrive and Excel In School.”
- See this review of Confetti and interview with Hu in Forbes.
Resources for AAPI Month
The theme for AAPI Heritage Month 2022 is “Advancing Leaders Through Collaboration.” Learn more about AAPI Heritage Month and why it’s in May here.
Hu gave an interview with Women in Hollywood in August 2021 about Confetti’s autobiographical roots, noting “In trying to figure out what to do, I ended up walking a long and hard journey to get to where I am today. In the process, my viewpoint changed, and I became a different person.”

Learn about Siena’s commitments and ongoing initiatives for Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging. And, see Siena’s blog for related material, including a spotlight on poet Amanda Gorman from Black History Month and Olympian and activist Meryl Davis from Women’s History Month.