Onenote School



Today’s post was written by Brad Shreffler, digital instructional coach at West Orange High School.

  1. Microsoft Onenote For Students
  2. Onenote Schoology
  3. Onenote For College

At West Orange High School, we have launched into OneNote as a school platform with both feet. At this point, just nine weeks into our one-to-one program, we have roughly 80 percent of our teachers using OneNote Class Notebooks for their day-to-day activities and 97 percent of our staff using the devices every period of every day.

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We believe that the biggest reason for this success is the use of OneNote Staff Notebook at the administrative level. As an admin team, starting from the principal down, we believed that the only way to get our teachers to use Class Notebooks was to model proper use and notebook setup. To do this we started thinking about the systems we previously had in place to deliver and receive information from our teachers. Our school heavily depended on SharePoint, and the tools there were extremely useful to us. Looking at the way our workflow went with SharePoint, and considering the power of Staff Notebooks, we broke our system into a total of three primary administrative notebooks.

School-wide Staff Notebook—Team WARRIORS

Our primary purpose for SharePoint was for distribution of documents, forms and lists to the staff. This included things like pre-planning schedules, professional development calendars, school maps, etc. To accomplish this goal, we developed a school-wide Staff Notebook called Team WARRIORS (our school mascot). We removed the individual teacher tabs and just use the Content Library, Collaboration Space and Welcome area.

Here is a look at some of the key sections:

The Welcome page for our school-wide Staff Notebook.

In a Staff Notebook, we have lots of organization options. By breaking our content into the various sections within the Content Library, information is easy for our teachers to find.

Microsoft Onenote For Students

Here is an example of the Discipline section:

Information is organized by section and then the various pages within the section.

As we entered further into the school year, we found that Team WARRIOR became the perfect place to store tutorials and how-to’s for the technology that we use in our classrooms. Teachers can download a document and then click on the page to see it immediately. It also allows us to make our content dynamic. For example, if a software application has an update and the tutorial or how-to becomes dated, I can make a new version and replace it on the page. OneNote automatically downloads the most recent version, ensuring that all teachers have the most recent information.

The Technology section of Team WARRIORS.

This Staff Notebook has been hugely beneficial to our staff for finding documents. Even more importantly, it forces our staff to actually use OneNote and helps them make connections between what a Class Notebook can do and how they might actually use it in their classroom.

Onenote Schoology

Leadership Team Staff Notebook

Our principal created a Leadership Team Staff Notebook and added the assistant principals, deans and support personnel who make up the leadership team. The Leadership Team Staff Notebook helps the principal disseminate information to the team, such as the weekly newsletters from our deputy superintendent, agendas for our weekly leadership team meetings and the supervision schedule and maps. In addition, it maintains the classroom teacher observation schedule, ensuring that all administrators know who they should be observing in the classroom each week. It also allows our principal to ensure the observations are completed.

The best use of the Leadership Team Staff Notebook is the use of the Collaboration Space for the team meeting agendas. Here our principal supplies the agenda, and everyone in the meeting can follow along as he goes. In addition, we can make notes for the rest of the team to see, and comments can be added with questions or more details as we go through the meeting. This process helps prevent interruptions or stopping the flow of the meeting to get clarification.

An agenda, with added notes, from our last meeting.

Evaluating administrator notebooks—Team AP

The most useful, and beneficial, Staff Notebooks are the ones set up by each of the evaluating administrators at our school. These notebooks add all of that administrator’s direct reports (primarily broken into the different subject area departments). Within each of these are the specific documents that the administrator wants shared to the teachers and support staff that they oversee. In each of the teachers’ own sections, they submit their syllabus at the beginning of the year, their weekly lesson plans and their quarterly grade verification.

Onenote For College

View of the individual teacher section of the Staff Notebook.

In addition, the Collaboration Space of this notebook has been beneficial for departments and grade levels within departments to collaborate. The Reading department, for example, has taken to using the Collaboration Space for all of their documents.

Onenote School

Take a close look at the navigation panel and organization structure of the example below:

Organization of the Reading department Collaboration Space. By grade level, by quarter, by standard.

Advantages to using Staff Notebooks

There are two major advantages to our use of Staff Notebook to run our school. The first is efficiency. OneNote allows each administrator to directly control how their system is set up, and each administrator only sees their direct reports, instead of everyone.

The other major advantage, and in my opinion the bigger of the two, is that it gives our teachers the chance to use OneNote. More accurately maybe, it forces our teachers to use OneNote, so that when they begin to integrate it in their classroom, they already know how to use it. The use of a Class Notebook is an expectation of all of our teachers. OneNote is an extremely powerful tool, and the OneNote Class Notebook Creator is an amazing tool for instruction. Encouraging our staff to use Staff Notebooks showed them once you start to use it, you get a conceptual vision of the functions of the various components.

If you have any questions about our implementation at West Orange, feel free to email me, brad.shreff@gmail.com.

—Brad Shreffler

Analyzing student data is something we teachers spend hours doing. This information allows us to adjust our programs and lesson-design accordingly and cater to the vast abilities within our classes.

Early in my career I found it difficult to organize and keep track of all the data of my students’ learning. I had tried and tested a variety of logbooks and digital platforms but nothing was able to compile data and evidence as I wanted. That was until I was introduced to OneNote. I first began using OneNote to complete Running Records and found it to be the perfect platform for organizing and managing information. Recording my student data in OneNote has created an effective and efficient workflow where every piece of student data for my entire class is kept in one place.

By using OneNote to record student data I can:

  • Create a live spreadsheet that I can continually add to
  • Insert images of student work samples and annotate over the top
  • Record students’ verbalizing their learning and understanding
  • Create checklists with goals specific to individual students
  • Access and add to student records on any device


OneNote’s “Sections” and “Pages” features ensure I stay highly organised and manage all my students’ results and work samples throughout the entire school year. A “Section” is like a folder, and within each folder, you can have as many “Pages” as you require. At the beginning of each school year I set up my OneNote notebook like this:

*Key:

  • Sections
    • Pages
  • General
  • Student Profiles
  • Templates
  • Emails
  • Mathematics (Section Group)
    • Place Value
    • Four Operations
    • Measurement
    • Etc.
  • Inquiry (Section Group)
    • Term 1
    • Term 2
    • Term 3
    • Term 4
  • English (Section Group)
    • Writing
    • Reading
    • Spelling
    • Speaking & Listening


Here I demonstrate how to create sections in OneNote:

Within each section, I create an overview page of the whole class. On this landing page I have a table comprising of curriculum standards at level, as well as below and above. This gives me an immediate insight of where each student is at and allows me to group students accordingly. I then have individual pages for each student in my class to record specific information and snapshots of their learning.

Inserting snapshots of student work into OneNote is made simple with the Office Lens app. These two tools create a wonderful workflow to quickly take a photo of student work and then directly insert it into the relevant page within OneNote. It produces a digital copy of the student work that I can annotate over and refer back to when needed.


Here I demonstrate how I use OneNote to record and track student data and work samples:

OneNote has transformed how I record and track student data. It is the perfect platform that keeps all elements of data and student learning organized and streamlined throughout an entire school year. I can efficiently view each students progress and plan for future learning at each students’ point of need. I have proof of each students’ progress in each learning area that I can refer to when writing reports and discussing student progress during parent teacher interviews.


Eleni Kyritsis is an award winning Year 3 Teacher and Leader of Curriculum & Innovation from Melbourne, Australia. She is the Founder of TeachTechPlay, a monthly web show designed for teachers to share their creative lesson ideas. Eleni facilitates professional learning workshops around the world that focus on unleashing creativity and curiosity in classrooms. You can contact her at elenikyritis.com and @misskyritsis.