Cybersecurity Graduate Certificate
The University of North Georgia (红莲社区) and the Mike Cottrell College of Business' Department of Computer Science and Information Systems offer a graduate–level certificate in Cybersecurity. 红莲社区 has been designated by the National Security Agency (NSA) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) as a National Center of Academic Excellence in Cyber Defense Education.
The program is designed to enable students with a bachelor’s or master’s degree in computer science, information systems, information technology, or a closely related field, or graduates of other degree programs who can demonstrate sufficient technical proficiency, to enter the field of cybersecurity, cyber operations or cyber defense.
Students will complete a total of 10 credit hours of graduate-level computer science courses to meet the requirements of the certificate program.
Program Application Deadlines
If program capacity is met prior to established admission deadlines, we will stop accepting applications for admission and cancel remaining incomplete applicants. Completing your application earlier is better.
Summer Deadline
How to Apply to the Graduate Cybersecurity Certificate Program
In order to participate in the program, prospective students will need to . Students with an existing bachelor's or master's degree in CS/IS/IT or a closely related field will be deemed to meet the technical proficiency requirement.
You must be able to demonstrate technical proficiency in at least two of the following areas to gain admission:
- Programming
- Systems
- Networking
- Forensics
- Cryptography
Cybersecurity Graduate Certificate Curriculum
All courses must be completed with a grade of C or higher
Required Courses (7 Credit Courses)
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This course is designed to help students understand the critical role of cybersecurity in business and society today. The technical content of the course provides a broad overview of essential concepts and methods for assessing and assuring security in information systems and networks. In addition, the course examines the importance of security policy and management, information security as it relates to business risk and compliance, social issues such as individual privacy, and the role of public policy and international law.
Hours:
1
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This is a graduate-level course in applied computer security and cryptography. Topics include software vulnerability analysis, defense, and exploitation, reverse engineering, and applied cryptography. Students will also learn to develop security policy and design secure critical systems.
Hours:
3
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This course will provide a survey and in-depth discussion on selective topics of network security. It will bring together thoroughly updated coverage of all basic concepts, terminology, and issues, along with the practical skills essential to network security. Core topics include up-to-date discussion of encryption fundamentals, digital signature and certificate, network/wireless network/virtual private network security and applications, practical applications of firewalls, security policies and security standards.
Hours:
3
You may also use another 3 credit hour graduate-level CSCI course with prior department head approval for the optional additional courses.
Select One of these Options (3 credit hours)
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This course is an advanced computer forensics, focusing on Windows systems. The course focuses on advanced file system analysis, web and email, registry, as well as a comprehensive final case involving a moot court exercise. It will utilize existing open source tools.
Prerequisite/Corequisite:
Prerequisite: Departmental Approval
Hours:
3
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This course sits the intersection of computer security and software engineering. It provides students with a foundation of secure software development by applying security principles to software engineering lifecycle. Students will learn practical secure software developing and testing skills.
Hours:
3
Questions?
Carolyn.Pelkey@ung.edu
For questions about the application process, contact:
Graduate Admissions
grads@ung.edu
706-864-1543