Welcome to the 13/14 school year!
Please check under your classroom tab above. All of your assignments, as well as additional resources, will be located there.
Good luck!
Ms. Magyarosi
Please check under your classroom tab above. All of your assignments, as well as additional resources, will be located there.
Good luck!
Ms. Magyarosi
A little info about your teacher...
Mara Magyarosi
Art
Art Honors Society
Class of 2018 & 2019 Advisor
[email protected]
BFA in Photography and Art Education, College for Creative Studies
AAS in Photographic Technology, Oakland Community College
Mara Magyarosi joined KWHS after graduating from College for Creative Studies with a dual BFA in Photography and Art Education. She is primarily a photographer, but also has background in painting, ceramics, mixed media, and book arts. As a teacher, Mara’s goal is to have her students think independently and create in their own voice. Her students know that the classroom is for an open discussion of knowledge and it is her responsibility to facilitate the learning, not dictate it. To be able to find that connection with the students and make them feel comfortable enough to create real, emotional work is the key. Her favorite saying is, “In the end, you’ll remember that pressure made diamonds from coal.” When she is not teaching, Mara is organizing gallery shows and is the Michigan State Coordinator for the One Million Bones project, a national art activism project helping with genocide prevention efforts in Africa.
Art
Art Honors Society
Class of 2018 & 2019 Advisor
[email protected]
BFA in Photography and Art Education, College for Creative Studies
AAS in Photographic Technology, Oakland Community College
Mara Magyarosi joined KWHS after graduating from College for Creative Studies with a dual BFA in Photography and Art Education. She is primarily a photographer, but also has background in painting, ceramics, mixed media, and book arts. As a teacher, Mara’s goal is to have her students think independently and create in their own voice. Her students know that the classroom is for an open discussion of knowledge and it is her responsibility to facilitate the learning, not dictate it. To be able to find that connection with the students and make them feel comfortable enough to create real, emotional work is the key. Her favorite saying is, “In the end, you’ll remember that pressure made diamonds from coal.” When she is not teaching, Mara is organizing gallery shows and is the Michigan State Coordinator for the One Million Bones project, a national art activism project helping with genocide prevention efforts in Africa.