DANIELA DOYLE is a consultant with Public Impact. Her work addresses a wide range of education issues, including teacher quality, school finance, charter schools, turnarounds, and redesigning school models and teachers' roles to extend the reach of excellent teachers. A former elementary school teacher, Ms. Doyle is an alumna of Teach For America and Education Pioneers, a non-profit bringing innovative leaders to education. She holds a bachelor’s degree in public policy from Princeton University, a master’s of science for teachers from Pace University, and a master's degree in public policy from Duke University.
Example Projects: Ms. Doyle is currently focusing on school finance reform at the state level, new and developing teacher evaluation systems, and an evaluation of two school turnaround programs. Other recent work includes research on funding parity between charter and district-run school; research into charter facility funding; a review of charter schools in a Midwest state; and cross-sector and international research to improve performance management systems in public education.
Ms. Doyle has co-authored these recent publications: Developing Education Talent Pipelines for Charter Schools: A Citywide Approach, for the National Charter School Resource Center; Developing City-Based Funding Strategies: Investments to Create a Robust Charter Sector, for the National Charter School Resource Center; Leading Approaches to Philanthropic Investment in the Charter Sector: A Scan of Four Cities; A Student-Based Funding Model for Washington, and Student-Based Budgeting: Revamping School Funding in Washington to Improve Performance, for Partnership for Learning; Performance Guarantees in Education: Shifting Risk to Create Opportunity, for the American Enterprise Institute; Charter School Funding: Inequity Persists, for Ball State University; and The Tab: How Connecticut Can Fix its Dysfunctional Education Spending System to Reward Success, Incentivize Choice, and Boost Student Achievement, for ConnCAN.

