EdLegal, a new education-focused training company, has officially launched a modern, on-demand compliance training and continuing education platform designed specifically for teachers, administrators, and all Tennessee public educators. The service allows education professionals to eliminate the time and expense of travel while accessing a comprehensive – and ever growing – digital library of relevant coursework—anytime, anywhere.
Founded by Chris W. McCarty, an attorney and shareholder in the Knoxville office of Lewis Thomason, EdLegal was created to address long-standing frustrations with traditional professional development models.
“Too often, compliance training requires unnecessary travel and sitting through lectures when educators could be at school with their students,” McCarty said. “EdLegal was built to help remove inconvenience, allowing educators to access relevant, engaging classes from their offices or their homes at times which best fit their schedules.”
EdLegal’s on-demand platform offers a growing library of courses covering essential topics such as ethics, professional standards, school safety, and regulatory compliance. Content is tailored to the unique responsibilities of teachers, principals, superintendents, and other administrators, helping public schools – and public charter schools – meet requirements while elevating subject-matter expertise across their organizations.
Designed with flexibility in mind, EdLegal offers cost-effective packages which scale to fit every need—from individual learners to department-wide and system-wide instruction. Schools and districts can select training options that align with their sizes, budgets, and compliance goals, all while minimizing disruption to instructional time.
“Education professionals deserve training that respects their time,” McCarty added. “EdLegal empowers educators to learn in a way that is efficient, engaging, and directly applicable to today’s K-12 environment.”
For more information about EdLegal and its on-demand compliance training solutions, visit www.edlegal.net.





