WIP Wednesday: 12 sided ojo de dios
This is my first WIP Wednesday post. I aways enjoy them on other blogs. A week ago I took an Ojo workshop taught by Jay Mohler. This is a 12 sided one I started in the last day of the workshop. I found Jay online when I was looking for instructions on how to make simple god’s eyes for a lesson I was putting together. When I saw his Ojos my jaw dropped. I had no idea he lived near me when I found his website. I was lucky to be able to learn from the master. These would be terrific for 6th grade or up Waldorf homeschooling. This directly relates to geometry, and brings it into a 3 dimensional realm. For instance the purple was made with 3 squares, and the 2 two turquoise colors each make 2 triangles, or a 6 sided star each. This 12 sided one is too difficult for younger children, but they could make an 8 sided one or a 4 sided one witha bit of help. Mr. Mohler has a step by step tutorial on how to make an 8 sided Ojo on his website. The one below is an 8 sided Ojo. You should take a look at his website just to see the beautiful Ojos he makes. The ones I have made are really amature. His are amazing to look into. He also has a facebook page where he posts videos & pictures of new pieces he has available. I know that he also has an etsy shop.

4 comments November 25, 2009
Place value math game: squirrel grove
Earlier this year we did a place value lesson with squirrels, gnomes, and squirrel hotels carved out of trees. This is a game we created to go along with the place value lesson. We took it out again this week & reviewed place value, and added the millions manor.
This is how to make & play squirrels Grove.
To play each player rolls the die.
The players draws from the stone bag as many stones as the number they rolled with the die. So if I roll a 5, I would draw 5 stones. The player then places the stones in the hollows of the trees, and says the number that was created. In this instance I drew 5, and the number created was 30, 264 or thirty thousand, two hundred sixty four.
The next part is totally optional, as it may make it competitive. I realize this may be undesirable when you are trying to build a child’s confidence in math. We created a second board that is a great deal like snakes & ladders. When a player says their number correctly they move the same number of places on the game board as the number they made has stones. So if I had said the number above correctly, I would move 5 spaces since my number was made with 5 stones. We used nuts as game pieces. The first person to reach the 3 trees of squirrel grove wins. 
To make the game you will need:
- 3 small posterboards or thick papers
- small flat river rocks like you would find in the floral dept, black is best.
- a die or 2 if you have different levels of players
- crayons, preferably beeswax ones
- something such as bag or bowl for the stones
- string, or yarn
- optional paper for snakes & ladders type board
First, create the playing boards. Have the child/ren draw large trees with hollows large enough to place your stones in. You will need 3 trees. You may only use the hundreds tree if your child is in 1st grade, but you can add more trees as the child’s knowledge of place value grows. My daughter is in 3rd & we now work on place value up to the hundred millions. Use a hole punch to make holes on the edges & tie the trees together. The whole thing can be folded up & put away when you are done playing. 
Next, take the stones & paint numbers from 0 to 9. I used a paint pen, but acrylic with a brush will work just as well.You will need a die. It does not matter what numbers are on the die. You can always place stickers over the existing numbers & write what ever numbers you like. A child that is only working with values up to the hundreds place may need a die with only 1, 2, & 3 each appearing twice on the die. A standard 1 to 6 die may be just what you need. Right now the die we are using has 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, & 3.
You can then create the snakes & ladders type board to go along with the game. This is optional, but my daughter really likes it. It was her idea. We use nuts as game pieces. It is a simple, but very effective game. It really helps them be able to read larger numbers correctly by allowing them to really see how the placement created the value. Such as 246 could be only that, or it could be 246 thousand, or 246 million depending on which tree (or place) it is in. regardless of where it is, it is still said the same way. The stones can be used in any number of ways in simple math games. Such as pick 4 stones & add them. Pick 2 stones, and multiply them, ect. I hope this tutorial makes sense. If you have questions just place them in the comments section, and I will reply ASAP.
This is a picture my daughter drew when we did this lesson in 2nd grade. She did it in her free time on her own because she loved the math story & lesson so much.

3 comments November 23, 2009
Catching up with lessons, excursions & other minutia
After we learned about the Ojibwe and their homes and land it was time for day of the dead.
We did the typical day of the dead activities. We made pan de meurto. I liked the recipe we used this year better than any I had ever tried. It was easier than the others, and when you added the glaze it smelled & tasted like fresh doughnuts. I think I will make it again soon, but call it something else. We decorated with simple fold & cut papel picado. I still have not taken them down. I think I will make some red & green ones for Christmas.
I thought it would be a good time to start learning spanish. We already knew some basic phrases, colors, numbers, and things like that, we need to learn more so that we can speak it conversationally. We are learning it through songs & movement. We take the words & phrases from the songs & make large cards with the words on them and hang them up. We try to use the new words in everyday life.
I decided since it was day of the dead that we would learn about the mud houses of the Aztecs. Day of the dead has it’s roots in Aztec culture. The Aztec commoners lived in simple one room homes make of pole frames covered in mud or mud bricks. They usually had a thatched roof.
The Aztecs used cocoa beans as money we discussed this very briefly, as we will be going back to it deeper when we do a measurement block on money. Th Mexicolore website has a really wonderful page about cocoa as money. 3 cocoa beans would have been worth one avocado. I told my daughter the story of how the little blue frog brought cocoa to the people. We made a hot chocolate whisk called a “molinillo” from a piece of dowel & copper wire. All you do to make one is coil about 4 feet of wire around a dowel that is smaller than the one you are using for the handle. This will make your wire look like a spring. You need at least 3 of them. Then you just wrap the coils around the dowel/handle and wire on tightly. 
To make hot chocolate in the traditional way you rotate the molinillo between your two hands placed palm-sides together. The twisting motion frothes the chocolate. We made hot chocolate in this way while singing a traditional chant..
| Spanish | English |
| Bate, bate, chocolate, | Stir, stir, chocolate, |
| Tu nariz de cacahuate | Your nose is a peanut. |
| Uno, dos, tres, CHO! | One, two, three, CHO! |
| Uno, dos, tres, CO! | One, two, three, CO! |
| Uno, dos, tres, LA! | One, two, three, LA! |
| Uno, dos, tres, TE! | One, two, three, TE! |
| Chocolate, chocolate! | Chocolate, chocolate! |
| Bate, bate, chocolate! | Stir, stir, the chocolate! |
| Bate, bate, bate, bate, | Stir, stir, stir, stir, |
| Bate, bate, CHOCOLATE! | Stir, stir, CHOCOLATE! |
You can hear this chant & others for free at the Texas State Library Archives website.
“Chocolate” is about 1/3 down the page. This is a great resource for anyone wanting to add spanish to your curriculum or circle time.
We made some easy ojo de dios, or God’s eyes. The Caron website has a nice tutorial if you would like to see how to make them.
My daughter kept asking me “where” these different people we are learning about live. This continued to be an issue. She could not reconcile what their natural environment & climate was with where they were located. To me this was a huge issue that needed to be addressed. I decided we needed a map. I printed out a map of North America, or “Turtle Island” as many indigenous people called it. It was a completely blank map that we could color & fill in as we like. When we study a group of people and their homes we draw their house on the map where they live/d. You can print out a map in just about any size up to 7ft (I think). The one here is 3ft x 4ft. It prints out on regular printer paper & you just tape or glue it together.
The next people we studied were the Cherokee. We did not do any traditional school work with this group. Instead we went to where they lived (and still live & thrive). We went to the north Georgia Mountains. I love it there. We went to many little areas and saw the amazing sites. We went to Tallulah Gorge. This gorge is HUGE. I think they said 950ft. We were lucky enough to be there when they let the water loose. There was some really nice white water, and the kayakers were taking full advantage of it.
They have a small, but very nice museum, and info center. They had a great deal of information on the Cherokee inside, as well as some myths & legends you could read next to pictures & displays. Outside they had a wonderful blacksmith by the name of David Little doing demonstrations for visitors.
David is a man of many talents. He does black smith demos, makes unbelievable lighting fixtures, rehabilitates birds of prey and works at the Hike Inn at Amicalola Falls, an Inn you have to hike 5 miles on foot to get to. While driving around we discovered a beautiful old water powered mill right outside of Helen, Ga on the Chattahoochee River call the Nora Mill Garnary Grist Mill. It has been there since 1876. They grind all kinds of grain with very old french burr stones that are powered by the river you see in the pic below. This was a perfect thing for a 3rd grader to see as it ties into so many of our lessons. 
While we were up there we went to a great little music festival called Hemlockfest. It is a 3 day camp out festival put on every year to raise money to help save the hemlock trees which are being utterly devastated by a beetle. The proceeds go to university labs trying to save the Hemlocks. It was a great little festival. This was the view as we walked down the drive toward the festival. 
Once we were in the festival it was alive with music & good cheer. The weather could not have been better. This festival is wonderful. They even had canoes you could take out onto the lake for free.
They had a tepee set up at the far end of the lake that you could go inside of. That’s my husband playing violin on a rock by the lake.
The sign read “western plains tepee lodge..come in, sit down, tell stories.” 
They let you bring your dog. I have been to many music festivals, and this is the only one that is dog friendly. We heard Col. Bruce Hampton, and the Quark Alliance play on Saturday night, and all I can say is wow!! Great show…..I really loved this little festival. I will definitely be back next year.
Shortly after we came home we went on a field trip to Cypress Gardens in Moncks Corner, SC. This was a nice field trip. We all went out into the black water swamp on boats.
They have a buttefly pavillion, and aquarium too. I managed to capture this wierd little butterfly with my camera.
Here’s another of the same species in larva form….
That is what we have been up to the past few weeks. We are still working on our shelters block. Right now we are learning about tepees of the plains.
3 comments November 21, 2009
Life goes on….and so will this little blog
After a great deal of consideration, and reading the kind, and supportive comments some folks have left, I have decided that I will continue to post about our homeschool journey. I had no idea so many of you were getting something out of our blog. Most of my adult life I have only wanted to help, whether it be animals, friends, the earth, or children… and if my posting about things that we do can be useful and helpful, then I will continue. I may go a week without posting, maybe even 2 weeks, but I will continue. At the time when I had decided to end this blog I was feeling very run down….I felt like there was just no point in it. I suppose I am a perfectionist who tends to be melancholic, and that makes me have a very all or nothing attitude. It is not healthy, or constructive, and is something I definitely have to work on. I also had some cyber swiping with a nameless website swiping content, and that was very upsetting. I over re-acted to the situation when I let that incident defeat me. So, I will be posting. I hope many of you will continue to read. I do feel a little silly about the last post. While I was considering what I should do in regards to this blog a quote by James Keller continued to come up ”A candle loses nothing by lighting another candle”. There are so many people who served as a source of light for me, who have shared their knowledge, skill, and kindness. If I can use this blog as a way to return even a fraction of what I have received then it is worth the effort.
Love & light to all of you, Jenn
21 comments November 17, 2009
Last post
This will be the last post I write on this blog. It as been wonderful reading comments & well wishes from readers. I am just having a difficult time maintaining it, and keeping up with my responsibilities as a mother, and wife. I will leave the content that is here up so that it is still available for anyone who needs it.
Love & light, Jenn
19 comments November 9, 2009
Watercolor paper lantern tutorial
This is an easy tutorial for paper lanterns from a watercolor painting. You can of course make a painting just for a lantern, or use any other kind of paper.
gather materials: Watercolor painting, scrap cardboard such as from a cereal box, scissors, glue stick, tape, x-acto knife, tissue paper, clothespin, wire for handle
make a line 1 1/2 inches up from bottom, cut paper below line as shown
cut shapes from paper with x-acto knife
3 comments November 5, 2009
Craft worry dolls to help Amnesty International fight for womens rights
While searching the web for a worry doll tutorial I came across Amnesty International’s website. I had never heard of CEDAW, nor did I know the US was one of the only countries not to have yet ratified CEDAW. Instead of making worry dolls for ourselves we will make them, and send them to Amnesty International before december 10th, and take part in helping other women, and mothers around the world who are not as lucky as we are. Below is excerpted from Amnesty Internationals website. Please go there for more details, how to make the worry dolls, and to learn more about CEDAW.
Amnesty International USA activists around the country are crafting worry dolls to send a symbolic message to the Senate. We’re urging them to help protect women’s human rights by ratifying the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW).
Throughout the world, discrimination against women and girls is pervasive, and its impact is devastating. Of the world’s 1.3 billion poorest people, 70 percent are female. Violence against women is prevalent: one in three women worldwide will experience assault, rape or other abuse during her lifetime. Two-thirds of the world’s 771 million illiterate adults are women. Due to lack of adequate health care, more than 530,000 women die each year from pregnancy-related complications – one every minute.
CEDAW establishes international protections against these abuses: it offers women redress against violence, guarantees equal access to education, and commits nations to fighting maternal mortality. Yes the United States remains one of the only countries that has not ratified CEDAW.
One woman lost to pregnancy-related complications every minute means more than 10,000 maternal deaths every week — and those statistics are cause for urgent concern and attention. In Mayan tradition (and in some other indigenous communities around the world) one way to deal with worry is to make a “worry doll” — a simple doll made with a few popsicle sticks or a clothes-pin and some yarn or thread.
AIUSA members around the country are crafting these worry dolls. Join us in crafting 10,000 worry dolls to symbolize the 10,000 mothers we lose every week! Next year, we’ll deliver them to the Senate to push them to finally ratify CEDAW and protect women’s human rights.
Amnesty International USA activists around the country are crafting worry dolls to send a symbolic message to the Senate. We’re urging them to help protect women’s human rights by ratifying the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW).
Throughout the world, discrimination against women and girls is pervasive, and its impact is devastating. Of the world’s 1.3 billion poorest people, 70 percent are female. Violence against women is prevalent: one in three women worldwide will experience assault, rape or other abuse during her lifetime. Two-thirds of the world’s 771 million illiterate adults are women. Due to lack of adequate health care, more than 530,000 women die each year from pregnancy-related complications – one every minute.
CEDAW establishes international protections against these abuses: it offers women redress against violence, guarantees equal access to education, and commits nations to fighting maternal mortality. Yes the United States remains one of the only countries that has not ratified CEDAW.
One woman lost to pregnancy-related complications every minute means more than 10,000 maternal deaths every week — and those statistics are cause for urgent concern and attention. In Mayan tradition (and in some other indigenous communities around the world) one way to deal with worry is to make a “worry doll” — a simple doll made with a few popsicle sticks or a clothes-pin and some yarn or thread.
AIUSA members around the country are crafting these worry dolls. Join us in crafting 10,000 worry dolls to symbolize the 10,000 mothers we lose every week! Next year, we’ll deliver them to the Senate to push them to finally ratify CEDAW and protect women’s human rights.
Add comment November 3, 2009
This story is posted here with permission by it’s author Tiziana Boccaletti. She maintains an Etsy store 














