For schools built on Microsoft 365, Copilot's pitch mirrors Gemini's for Google schools — it's embedded directly into Word, Outlook, and Teams, which lowers the barrier for staff who are wary of learning a new standalone app.

Strengths for schools

  • Works inside familiar tools — drafting in Word, summarising in Outlook
  • Microsoft's education data protection terms are generally well documented for school IT leads already managing 365 for Education
  • Reduces the "yet another login" friction that slows staff adoption of new tools

Limitations

  • Full Copilot features often require a specific licensing tier, which may involve additional cost
  • Output style can feel more corporate than education-specific by default, requiring more prompt tuning for a primary tone

Who it suits best

A strong choice for Microsoft 365 schools wanting to minimise new-tool friction for staff, provided you check exactly which licence tier includes full Copilot features before promising it school-wide.

Worth knowing: No new software to procure is one of AskColin's core principles — if your school already runs Microsoft 365, that's exactly the environment their training and toolkit are built to work within. See how it works →

Key takeaways

  • Best fit for schools already on Microsoft 365, minimising new-tool friction.
  • Confirm your exact licensing tier includes full Copilot features first.
  • Expect to tune prompts for a warmer, more primary-appropriate tone.