Sunday, 15 January 2017

The College Also Is Actively Engaged With The Air Force Association (afa) Cyberpatriot Program, In Which High School Students Compete In Exercises Designed To Teach Them To Remediate Technological Vulnerabilities.

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Scott Walker does not want to raise any taxes to pay for roads. He would rather delay projects and borrow money. After all, the transportation budget is only short $1 billion. Assembly Republicans want to raise the gas tax a nickel a gallon to complete repairs now without borrowing. Senate Republicans want to make cuts somewhere else because they say that is the only way Gov. Walker will support a gas tax increase. In the midst of this debate, the roads are crumbling away. I suppose my husband and I could have wasted time bickering. Should we fix our foundation? Can we afford it?

For the original version including any supplementary images or video, visit http://www.kenoshanews.com/opinion/beth_adelsen_djuplin_it_costs_more_if_you_wait_490258104.php

Through a partnership with AFCEA (Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association), CIS faculty coordinate community volunteers and organize competitions and theory tests in computer fundamentals, information security, programming, digital graphics and basement waterproofing desktop publishing, PC repair, speaking, and interviewing. The college also is actively engaged with the Air Force Association (AFA) CyberPatriot program, in which high school students compete in exercises designed to teach them to remediate technological vulnerabilities. Twenty-eight of Arizonas 71 CyberPatriot teams - or 40 percent - are trained here at Cochise College. Important partnerships have helped fund progress in cybersecurity training at Cochise. A National Science Foundation Engineering Pathways Partnership Project grant has funded curriculum redesign with an industry advisory council. A $100,000 Youth CareerConnect Department of Labor grant funded opportunities for Center for Academic Success and Buena High School students taking cyber courses at Cochise. It also helped with the cost of equipment, primarily servers and removable solid-state drives. In addition to two Sierra Vista Campus cybersecurity classrooms, an additional classroom will soon turn into a dynamic workspace for students to tackle cybersecurity challenges as teams. Students will work in a cyber range to test high-level cyber technologies and in an Internet of Things lab that includes connected devices that seldom are considered when developing a security plan for an organization. Think Amazon Echo devices that are always on and connected and waiting for a voice command.

For the original version including any supplementary images or video, visit http://www.svherald.com/news/cybersecurity-training-puts-jobs-within-reach/article_e7b2dd86-dacf-11e6-8712-e7d099444c83.html

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