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UTC Introduces Nationwide Program to Train Cybersecurity Professionals

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Contaminants

Contaminants

Dr. Mengjun Xie of the Computer Science and Engineering Deparment speaks during the official launch of the Cybersecurity Workforce Certification Training program.

by Shawn Ryan

A grant of almost $9.8 million from the U.S. National Security Agency and the Department of Homeland Security is funding a program at UTC to address the growing cybersecurity needs worldwide.

The new Cybersecurity Workforce Certification Training (CWCT) is focused on preparing military veterans and firstresponders—police, firefighters, EMTS, and others—to transition to careers in cybersecurity, said Mengjun Xie, UC Foundation associate professor in computer science and engineering.

The program also is open to anyone with an interest in cybersecurity work, regardless of background, Xie said.

“We believe the pedagogy used and the training methods developed in the program will quickly become national standards in preparing those, throughout the nation, who are seeking to transition to cybersecurity careers,” said Dean Pack.

The program is a collaboration between UTC, Purdue University Northwest, Ivy Tech Community College, and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

CECS and the Center for Professional Education are combining their efforts to offer the program, monitoring student progress, and issuing certificates, once graduates complete the 10-week course.

By 2025, global cybercrime will cost business and institutions $10.5 trillion per year, according to MSN Money. Cyberhacking is so pervasive, said CWCT coordinator Steve Reiter, it’s not so much an issue of blocking it entirely but dealing with the aftermath.

Of roughly 6,700 cybersecurity jobs open in Tennessee, about 300 are in Southeast Tennessee and North Georgia, said Reiter, a former chief information officer at Fortune 500 companies Hewlett-Packard and Tennco. With that demand, the program is attracting interest from across the country and applications are exceeding expectations with 4,300 applicants from all 50 states.

“We’re breaking new ground,” said Joe Ferguson, chair of the CECS Advisory Board. “This is a big deal.” The CWCT program is divided into three focus areas—digital forensics, system administration, and artificial intelligence.

After a system has been hacked, digital forensics kicks in and tries to backtrack the source of the hacking and how it was done.

System administration covers the computer and software demands, employee guidance, purchase orders, and other managerial functions. UTC will lead the training in this area.

Artificial intelligence is the most technically oriented and takes a broad, worldwide view on the growth and development of technological capabilities and how those affect cybercrime both now and in the future.

System administration covers the fundamentals of computer systems, networks and cybersecurity, cyber infrastructure development, and security protection as well as such areas as employee direction and office management. UTC will lead the program in this area, which has the highest enrollment of the three training branches.

H. Charles Kimbrough, a veteran from the U.S. Air Force and U.S. Army, is enrolled in the CWCT and describes the program as a “game-changer.”

“Training of this magnitude, provided in this manner, is truly a game-changer for our country and all those who are fortunate to sit in the virtual classrooms in order to become cybersecurity professionals.”

For more information:

www.cwct.us www.cyberseek.org threatmap.checkpoint.com

Cybersecurity Key Points

SCAN TO WATCH ON YOUTUBE • More than 597,000 U.S. jobs are now open in cybersecurity. • About 6,700 cybersecurity jobs are open in Tennessee and about 300 in Southeast

Tennessee and North Georgia. • Employment demand is expected to grow 22-24% in the next five years. • Nationally, a cybersecurity professional with five to eight years of experience earns about $99,000 a year.

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