An elite Washington education policy group has conducted an anonymous survey of influential education insiders to provide strategic support to stakeholders in the current Common Core debate.

Whiteboard Advisors state their April 2014 survey contains the views of unidentified education policy “insiders,” including:

In the group’s publication, titled Education Insider: Gainful Employment Regulation, Race To The Top Standings, Bobby Scott Leadership Implications, Chiefs v. Unions, Whiteboard Advisors asked their education insiders the following question:

During the recent CCSSO [Council of Chief State School Officers] annual legislative conference, leaders of the AFT [American Federation of Teachers] and NEA [National Education Association] argued with state chiefs over the public perception and implementation of the Common Core. Massachusetts Commissioner Mitchell Chester stated that the two unions seemed to be “condoning” the behavior of Common Core opponents “at the peril” of teachers who are moving things ahead. Why the shift in tone toward the unions now?

Historically, the CCSSO, along with the National Governor’s Association (NGA) and nonprofit progressive education company Achieve Inc., developed the Common Core standards. The CCSSO and the NGA own the copyrights to the standards.

The insiders’ responses to the Whiteboard Advisors’ question are below:

The above education insiders’ insights illustrate several particularly noteworthy observations about what may be viewed as an apparent fracture in the relationship between two major stakeholders in the Common Core debate – the CCSSO and the national teachers’ unions.

The most significant of these insights are: a general distrust of the two national teachers unions and, specifically, their true motives in the Common Core debate; a suggestion that U.S. Education Department Secretary Arne Duncan may have skewed Race to the Top (RttT) funding toward states in which union support of Common Core was thought to be high; and the questionable decisions by the CCSSO to ignore the need for transparency and dismiss concerns about the Common Core standards as illegitimate.