Trickling in from their buses, the students in Marcia Wyatt's class stop and check the easel where she's posted her daily greeting.
As they enter without chatter to head to their seats, she reminds one or two to straighten a collar on their navy blue uniform shirts.
Wyatt has been teaching in no-nonsense fashion in Minneapolis schools since 1992, always in high-poverty schools. She is aware — and very proud — of her reputation. It's one that keeps some families asking for her when the next sibling comes along.
"I'm the one who is probably the strictest in the building. I really truly hold the students accountable. I'm known as the one you don't want to mess with," she said during a break from her third-grade classroom at Elizabeth Hall elementary school in Minneapolis.
Wyatt and dozens of teachers like her are bucking the general trend of experienced Minneapolis teachers leaving the most challenging schools, despite accumulating seniority that would allow them to do so.
That general pattern means that typically the schools that have high minority populations have the least experienced teachers. But Hall has maintained a teaching staff that averages 13 years of experience — right on the district average.
Wyatt stays in part because she values her teaching colleagues and the leadership of Principal Bennice Young, who has led the school since 2006, taking the post two years after now-Superintendent Bernadeia Johnson, who hired Wyatt at Elizabeth Hall.
Wyatt's strictness masks a fierce desire to make a difference for her students. "I want to be in a school where the students look like me and I look like them," said Wyatt, who is black. "This is where I've always wanted to teach so it's where I want to stay. The challenges help me to grow."