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Weekend Reading: What Detroit's mayor saw when he visited a crumbling school building By | January 16, 2016, 12:09am UTC Responding to a sweeping teacher “sickout” over school conditions, Detroit’s mayor visited one crumbling building — and found a dead mouse. (Detroit News ) The Ethicist absolves a parent of sending his son to the low-scoring school in his neighborhood. (New York Times ) Another answer: Thinking only about your own child fuels inequity and so is ethically troubling. (The Billfold ) You didn’t win this week’s Powerball lottery. Neither did schools. (International Business Times ) Studies have found that decrepit school facilities have a negative effect on student learning. (The 74 Million ) The Common Core popped up in Thursday’s Republican presidential debate, with a half-truth from N.J. Gov. Chris Christie. (Politics K-12 ) A Brit says he sees promise but not a panacea in England’s growing sector of charter-like schools. (Educated Reporter ) Chicago is the latest city to get a study concluding that poor schools have more low-rated teachers. (Catalyst ) More than 100,000 students in New York City pass through metal detectors to get into school every day. (ProPublica ) Los Angeles finally named a new schools chief — a top official who prefers to take things slowly. (L.A. Times ) A new TV comedy is getting rave reviews for breaking down stereotypes about middle-school teachers. (Hollywood Reporter ) President Obama didn’t say much about education in his final State of the Union address. Here’s a rundown. (Hechinger Report ) Louisville ponders offering incentives for teachers to take jobs at struggling schools. (Courier-Journal ) Cincinnati opens its second gifted academy. (Enquirer ) Ohio’s state board of education president says it is too focused on politics, calls for a reducing its power. (Dispatch ) clock CST_