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Cybersecurity skills need boost in computer science degrees

University computer science courses are failing to make clear the need to develop skills in cybersecurity, leaving the UK with a shortage of experts

Published on
November 12, 2014
Last updated
May 27, 2015

This is according to a paper published jointly last week by the Council of Professors and Heads of Computing and (ISC)2, the International Information Systems Security Certification Consortium.

ā€œTwenty years ago very few courses paid any significant attention to security, and the situation has started to change, albeit slowly,ā€ says ā€œā€.

This is despite ā€œa growing voice from industry that cybersecurity knowledge should be core to the disciplines of computing and information technologyā€, meaning such skills should therefore be ā€œa key element of the computing and computer science curriculum, particularly at the undergraduate levelā€.

Currently most institutions offer computer science courses in which there is one module or unit – approximately 5 per cent of the total credits – dedicated to cybersecurity in a three-year degree, the paper claims.

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It also notes that graduates find it difficult to enter the cybersecurity industry because ā€œthe supervisory cost of placements is very high for companies to take on many graduates of any kind in cybersecurity rolesā€.

ā€œAcademia must look at its curricula and accreditation requirements,ā€ said Liz Bacon, president of the Chartered Institute for IT, adding it was also incumbent on industry to accept more trainees and placement students.

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She said that more sandwich placements needed to be made available, and that lecturers could not single-handedly boost interest in cybersecurity among students, and that ā€œtalks from external speakersā€ and ā€œwar storiesā€ from industry were more likely to excite students.

ā€œIt is not enough to integrate technical cybersecurity subjects into computing degrees as cybersecurity is an increasingly a diverse discipline, requiring a mix of business savvy, soft skills and technical skills for varied roles,ā€ added Adrian Davis, managing director (Europe, the Middle East and America) of (ISC)2.

ā€œUniversities have a real opportunity to include andĀ make explicit reference to cybersecurity topics within many degrees.ā€

In August, the first GCHQ-certified master’s courses were unveiled, with Edinburgh Napier University, Lancaster University, the University of Oxford and Royal Holloway, University of London, among those accredited.

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chris.parr@tesglobal.com

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