For students
Ask your IT team to enable mydocs.school.
Your school hasn't turned this on yet. A one-time tenant consent from your IT admin unlocks it for everyone — and it's ~30 seconds of clicking, with nothing to install.
Use this form to draft the email
Two fields, one click, your email is ready to send.
Fill in your school's name and your IT admin's email (or leave it blank and copy the template). We'll open your email app pre-filled, with a friendly explanation and a link to our admin-consent page.
Email preview
Subject:Please enable mydocs.school for our students
Hi, I'd like to keep a copy of my OneDrive and OneNote work from our school before I leave. There's a service called mydocs.school that lets students download their own files in one click. To enable it for our school, please open this URL in a browser and sign in with a Cloud Application Administrator account: https://mydocs.school/onboard Click "Grant consent for my school" and review the scopes Microsoft shows (read-only on OneDrive, OneNote, and class roster). Click Accept. The whole flow takes about thirty seconds — there's nothing to install in your tenant. Technical detail for your team: https://mydocs.school/for-it-administrators Thanks, [your name]
Fill in school name and a valid admin email
What your IT admin will be asked to do
When they open mydocs.school/onboard and click Grant consent for my school, Microsoft shows them the standard tenant-wide consent screen with the exact scopes we ask for (read-only on OneDrive, OneNote, and class membership). They click Accept. That's it. From that moment every student at your school can sign in normally.
For the technical detail your IT team will probably want to see first: the IT administrators page covers the Entra app, requested scopes, security posture, hosting region, and Data Processing Agreement availability.
While you wait
- Read why this matters — the case for taking your school work with you.
- Browse the file types you'll receive and what opens them on a personal computer.
- See how to open .one files on Windows and Mac so you're ready when the day comes.