| C.E. Irvine, D.F. Warren, and P.C. Clark, "The NPS CISR Graduate Program in INFOSEC: Six Years of Experience, " Proc. 20th Nat'l Information Systems Security Conf., National Inst. of Standards and Technology, Baltimore, Md., 1997, pp. 22-30. |
....security. Unfortunately, the number of skilled practitioners of computer security today is small [10] making it necessary to incorporate security studies into educational programs. Furthermore, students must be prepared for real situations. Thus, practical laboratory experience is essential [11]. Since 1993, a course in Applied Computer Security has been given at Chalmers University of Technology, offered in the final year of the Master s Degree Program. Topics covered in the course are: access control, authentication, cryptography basics, database security, network security, operating ....
Cynthia E. Irvine, Daniel F. Warren, and Paul C. Clark. The NPS CISR graduate program in infosec: Six years of experience. In Proceedings of the 20th National Information Systems Security Conference, pages 22--30, Baltimore, MD, USA, October 1997. National Institute of Standards and Technology/National Computer Security Center.
....science to be prepared to engage in extensive system development projects. Instead a series of short exercises may be most appropriate. In the Naval Postgraduate School program, we have a set of laboratory exercises, each of which is used to illustrate a particular concept being taught in class [3]. Each exercise includes questions that students must answer and our exams usually include a few questions related to the exercises. The exercises cover topics such as passwords, mandatory access controls, discretionary access controls, secrecy and integrity policies and their enforcement, ....
Irvine, C.E., Warren, D. F., and Clark, P. C. "The NPS CISR Graduate Program in INFOSEC: Six Years of Experience," In Proceedings of the 20 th National Information Systems Security Conference, pp. 22-30, Baltimore, MD, October 1997.
....with those in academe and industry. Most computer security research is of interest to someone beyond the hallowed halls of one s institution. For example, the computer security research of the Naval Postgraduate School Center for Information Systems 3 Security Studies and Research (NPS CISR) [2] has involved the interest of, and often collateral participation by, researchers and developers from the military services and Department of Defense (DoD) activities, the U.S. Government, federally funded research and development centers (FFRDCs) other academic institutions, and numerous ....
Cynthia E. Irvine, Daniel F. Warren, and Paul C. Clark. The NPS CISR Graduate Program in INFOSEC: Six Years of Experience. In Proceedings of the 20th National Information Systems Security Conference, pages 22--30, Baltimore, MD, October 1997. 5
....a variety of performance and operational characteristics. An asset for graduates is the ability to apply their scientific and engineering knowledge to new problem areas while contributing to the soundness of solutions. 4. SECURITY PROGRAM The Naval Postgraduate School computer security program [9] is intended to address the needs of a variety of students. All students enrolled in the Computer Science, Information Warfare, Command and Control, and Information Technology Curricula are required to take a survey course in computer security. Many also enroll in a course, entitled Secure ....
Irvine, C.E., Warren, D. F., and Clark, P. C. The NPS CISR Graduate Program in INFOSEC: Six Years of Experience. In Proceedings of the 20 th National Information Systems Security Conference, pp. 22-30, Baltimore, MD, October 1997.
....can answer the questions as they pertain to security and engineering, and relate the two disciplines within the framework. 3. 2 Relating Security, Engineering, and Computer Science Within a Framework of Critical Thinking In Goals for Security Education [19] and NPS CISR: Six Years of Experience [21], Irvine describes topics chosen to illustrate and enforce the notion [4] that certain components of the system must be designed to be both continuously effective in enforcing policy and resistant to malicious software: ffl security policy models ffl formal methods applied to system ....
Cynthia E. Irvine, Daniel F. Warren, and Paul C. Clark. The NPS CISR Graduate Program in INFOSEC: Six Years of Experience. In Proceedings of the 20th National Information Systems Security Conference, pages 22 -- 30, Baltimore, MD, October 1997.
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C.E. Irvine, D.F. Warren, and P.C. Clark, "The NPS CISR Graduate Program in INFOSEC: Six Years of Experience, " Proc. 20th Nat'l Information Systems Security Conf., National Inst. of Standards and Technology, Baltimore, Md., 1997, pp. 22-30.
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