Walter Johnson HS Chapter
Mu Alpha Theta National Math Honor Society
Click here for the Math Department Home Page
Staff Sponsor: Staci Gallun <Staci_C_Gallun@mcpsmd.org> and Kevin Parrish <Kevin_M_Parrish@mcpsmd.org>
Meeting times: TBA
2025-2026 Officers President: Clara Frank Vice President: Namuun Tugsjargal Secretary: Anna Kim Treasurer: Lucia Kanazir |
Purpose
The Math Honor Society (national website) is designed to promote interest in mathematics, bring together a group of mathematically talented students, and help students who need assistance with their math studies.
Requirements
- For Members (those who will apply/be accepted and can earn credits for a graduation cord): Members need to have a 3.5 GPA in math (unweighted) and be enrolled in Honors Precalculus or an AP math class.
- For Associates (those who are interested, but may not meet the requirements/not ready to apply): No requirement.
- In general -- ALL ARE WELCOME.
- Information about the application process will be released in September/October.
MHS Help Room (225) -- Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday at Lunch
The Math Honor Society runs the Math Help Room (225) at lunch on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. It is staffed by a certified teacher and highly qualified students enrolled in higher-level math courses. Students at all levels are welcome.
Math Murals
The Math Honor Society and the National Art Honor Society have collaborated on some beautiful, large-scale math murals. See the photos below, and come check them out in person on the second floor of WJ!
The Platonic Solids
This mural, featuring the five Platonic Solids, was finished in Spring 2025. John Chase, math resource teacher, directed the project, and students Ashton Hyer and Clara Frank painted the mural. For the mathematical context of this mural, check out this video.
The Archimedean Solids
This mural, featuring the 13 Archimedean Solids, was finished in Spring 2023. John Chase, math resource, directed the project, and students from the Math Honor Society and the National Art Honor Society painted the mural. For the mathematical context of this mural, check out this video.
The Stegosaurus Spectre Tiling
This mural, featuring a "stegosaurus" version of the aperiodic "Spectre" tiling, was finished in Spring 2024. John Chase, math resource, directed the project, and students painted the mural. This mural pays homage to the very recent discovery of the very first "Chiral Aperiodic Monotile" -- a single tile that covers the plane without overlaps or gaps and yet, no matter how hard you try, cannot produce a repeating pattern. Click here for the article by David Smith, Joseph Samuel Myers, Craig S. Kaplan, and Chaim Goodman-Strauss from May 2023. For the mathematical context of this mural, check out these two blog posts from John Lindner, the creator of this version of the tiling -- the second post features our mural.