Ohio · Career guide
How to become a Principal in Ohio
Principals manage a school's instruction, operations, staff, family engagement, and student safety. The role typically requires 3-5 years of classroom teaching, a master's degree in educational leadership, completion of a state-approved principal preparation program, and passage of a state administrator licensure exam. Salaries materially exceed classroom-teacher pay (often by 40-70%) but the hours and accountability are correspondingly higher.
No principal / school leadership positions are open in Ohio right now — set up an alert and we'll notify you when new postings are scraped.
Certification path in Ohio
- Earn a bachelor's degree. Most candidates complete a teacher-preparation program either as part of their undergraduate studies or as a post-baccalaureate add-on.
- Pass the required exams. Ohio typically requires:
- Ohio Assessment for Educators (OAE) Foundations of Reading — Required for Early Childhood and PK–5 licenses
- OAE Content Knowledge Assessment — Subject-area knowledge test for your licensure area
- edTPA — Performance assessment during student teaching
Principal / administrator licensure is a distinct tier with its own preparation program and exam. Some states require an internship under a sitting principal as part of certification.
- Apply for your initial license through Ohio Department of Education and Workforce. The packet typically includes official transcripts, exam scores, a background check, and (depending on the state) a recommendation from the teacher-prep program. Visit Ohio Department of Education and Workforce →
- Job-search in Ohio. We'll track principal / school leadership openings as districts post them; set up an alert to be notified immediately when new positions go live.
Alternative pathways in Ohio
If you didn't follow the traditional university-route, Ohio offers these alternate paths that may apply to your situation:
- Resident Educator through an Approved Alternative Program (non-traditional route)
- Career-Technical Education licenses for industry professionals
- Teach For America (active in Cleveland and Cincinnati)
Ohio salary context
Average teacher salary in Ohio: $59,382/year (rank #26 nationally). Entry-level pay with a bachelor's typically starts at $33,000/year.
Role-specific premiums vary by district — special education, STEM, and bilingual roles frequently command signing bonuses or stipends. See the full Ohio salary guide for the breakdown.