For any school that wants to grant Ontario Secondary School Diploma credits, the Ministry inspection is the gate. Understanding what it reviews, and preparing accordingly, is the difference between a smooth approval and being sent back to rebuild.
This is general information, not legal advice. Confirm the current inspection requirements and fees with the Ontario Ministry of Education.
What the inspection is for
A private secondary school in Ontario cannot grant OSSD credits until it has been inspected and granted credit-granting authority. (If that surprises you, start with can a private school grant OSSD credits.) The inspection exists to confirm that a school issuing diploma credits actually meets Ontario's standards for doing so.
It is a review of a real, operating school, not a paperwork exercise.
What an inspector reviews
While every inspection is specific to the school, the review generally covers:
- Courses and curriculum alignment. Whether each credit course is built around the Ministry's curriculum expectations, with appropriate assessment and evaluation. This is the substance of the school, and OSSD-aligned course infrastructure is what makes it defensible.
- Staff qualifications. That credit courses are taught by Ontario Certified Teachers (members of the Ontario College of Teachers) and that the school has a principal responsible for academic decisions.
- Assessment and evaluation. How marks are assigned, how feedback is given, and whether practices are consistent with Ontario policy.
- Student records. The Ontario Student Record (OSR) and Ontario Student Transcript (OST): complete, accurate, and ready to produce.
- Policies. Academic integrity, assessment, privacy, attendance and engagement, and health and safety.
- Online delivery (for virtual schools). How supervision, assessment integrity, and records function in a digital environment.
How to walk in prepared
The single biggest predictor of a clean inspection is preparation. The schools that pass without drama are the ones whose evidence is already organized, because their systems produced it as the school ran.
That means rubrics and assessment records that accumulate automatically, engagement logs that show real student activity, and OSR/OST workflows that stay current instead of being reconstructed the week before. This is precisely what inspection-ready operations means: your principal can audit any mark back to its rubric, and your records tell a consistent story.
Assembling all of that by hand, days before an inspector arrives, is where launches unravel. Building the school on infrastructure that keeps it inspection-ready by default is how you avoid it.
Inspection is ongoing
Passing once is not the end. An inspected private school stays subject to ongoing inspection to keep its credit-granting authority. "Inspection-ready" is therefore a permanent operating standard, one more reason to build the school on systems that maintain that standard continuously rather than in bursts.
Where SchoolConex fits
SchoolConex gives an online private school the foundation an inspection expects, under its own brand: OSSD-aligned courses, Ontario teacher support, and records and workflows that stay inspection-ready as the school operates. If you are preparing for your first inspection, or want to stop scrambling before each one, the full guide to starting an online private school in Ontario shows the whole path, and a 30-minute walkthrough shows the operations behind it.