Forum Discussion
OneNote Class Notebooks created with SharePoint app v created with App Launcher in OneDrive
Hi, I'm hoping to create some more conversation and hopefully authorative comment from Microsoft on the Sharepoint App to create [EduOneNoteAppDocuments].
If this Sharepoint Online document library name doesn't make sense, in the screenshot below you will see that we have over 2000 ClassNotebook items in this particular Sharepoint Library. Why... because they are school wide resources - owned by groups of teachers - and in our humble opinion not suited to a OneDrive model.
Our Problem. You cannot effectively use the ClassNotebook Management features on ClassNotebooks created and stored in Sharepoint Sites/Libraries. They simply do not show up in your list of manageable notebooks.
It gets more complex if you suggest Teams, as the O365 group and subsequent site and class notebook created by a Team - can be easily deleted due to the transient nature of the Teams group.
I need expert advice on whether to continue with the Sharepoint Online Class Notebook Creation App (not the default waffle menu one) - does it have a future?
Some interesting thoughts there Chris Laycock Microsoft seems to be focusing on the use of Teams with Class Notebooks in there. I'm not sure what you mean "can be easily deleted due to the transient nature of the Teams group". Alex Pearce Alex Pearce might have some thoughts.
- Chris LaycockNov 16, 2017Iron Contributor
Clarifying my comment wrt "transient" ;-) perhaps (as an older Sharepoint user) I'm struggling with the difference in creating a Sharepoint Online "Site" that exists within a hierarchical structure versus an "Office365 Group" that is created through a App such as Teams, Yammer, MS Classroom, Planner - that exists in the 'bucket' of content.
For content (Notebooks, files, documents) that are going to exist, be edited, maintained for long periods (6-10 years) I'm questioning the 'bucket approach'. Do we expect a MS Team (Teams for Education in my case) to have a lifespan of 6 years?
Don't get me wrong... I love the "bucket" metaphor and the discovery paradigm of Delve to discover it... BUT are the O365 Apps that create "bucket' content long term solutions.
Thanks for your opinions and feedback.
- Alex PearceNov 17, 2017Copper Contributor
I feel there are a few things to mention here.
The first is yes you can move notebooks between OneDrives and OneDrive or onedrive to sharepoint (Groups, Teams, SPO) using the API.
The app that was added to sharepoint is no longer supported and theres no further development to this. You are going to get the features you from either the Class Notebook, Teams or the API. I don't think Microsoft will get rid of the app launcher version of the Class Notebook and force us to use Teams. It would be a real shame if they did as so many use this and not ready for Teams. Teams isn't for everyone (from what we are seeing with our customers) but they do still want the notebook.
You can still create notebooks in SharePoint using the API. We have done some extensive work around this and have built a solution that will create all the notebooks in a SharePoint Online Site Collection based on the OneNote API and your MIS. Works great once you understand how the API, timeouts, throating etc work
- Chris LaycockNov 24, 2017Iron Contributor
Thanks Alex. We are currently running some trial MS Teams to investigate the ease of management and distribution of content/sections between up to ~30 Class Notebooks as part of our Student Wellbeing programme.
I understand the API is capable of achieving much... however with limited school budgets and management coming down to academic admin officers - I'm not sure whether the API is a solution for most schools.
Thanks for your response.... it's steered me in the Teams direction.