Glenda Ritz is doing Indiana's teaching ranks no favors by trying to protect pay raises for the weakest in the field. How can anyone take her seriously when she's willing to pay for mediocrity and failure?

Here's where Ritz, Indiana's superintendent for public instruction, and Statehouse school reformers agree: The percentage of teachers who need improvement seemed a bit light in the first round of state-mandated evaluations.

The results of district-by-district evaluations, released April 7 and part of Indiana's school reform agenda, showed a vast majority of teachers were "effective" or "highly effective" in their jobs. Fewer than 3 percent were ranked in the "needs improvement" or "ineffective" categories.

Here's where Ritz and Statehouse school reformers don't agree: Ritz says teachers in the "needs improvement" category deserve raises, too.

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