Full-Service Development for PreK-12 Products
Our staff comprises former educators with advanced degrees combined with publishing experience. Expertise spans the core-4 spectrum—math, science, reading/language arts, and social studies/humanities. KGL’s editorial team works with internal design, art, production, and technology/digital development teams to enable full-service publishing workflows.
Following are some of the common services we provide.

Product Planning
- instructional design
- creative prototype development
- focus testing and analysis
- product design and market research
- scope and sequence development
- concept development
Product Development Expertise
- student editions
- teacher editions
- assessments
- response to intervention (RTI)
- curriculum development
- animations
- interactives
- mobile products
- ebooks
- interactive whiteboards
Editorial Development
- manuscript development
- content editing
- curriculum alignment
- art and map specifications development
- web content development
- scripting/storyboarding for animation and interactive products
- audio scripts
- digital products
- metadata creation
- section 508 compliance
- leveling and readability adaptation
Correlations and Customizations
- common core state standards
- customized product development
- standards tracking
- gap analysis
- program alignment to standards
- assessment alignment
- international adaptation
Management and Production
- editorial/production management
- workflow development
- asset tracking
- budget updates
- schedule development and preparation
- weekly status reports
Student & Teacher Edition Samples
Webinar
DEI in Educational Publishing
KGL educational publishing expert, Vanessa Vaughn, describes how K-12 and higher ed content providers are paying new attention to inclusive representation in published content.
what our Customers say about us
Latest Insights
Every decade or so, scholarly publishing is forced to adapt to disruption. But today’s crisis is different. We’re not just facing economic or technological change—we’re watching the infrastructure of science itself come under political threat.
We asked our colleagues a simple question: If you could read the scholarly publishing industry news headlines of 2030 what would they say?
Angela Cochran explores the wide-ranging impact of public access policies on publishers, researchers, and the integrity of the scholarly record, highlighting key changes from NIH, DOE, NASA, and NSF.