Calhoun Times

GNTC offers three programs in high-demand cybersecur­ity field

- From Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College

A program of study at Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College is training students to guard sensitive informatio­n in a world where hackers are getting smarter every day.

“Cybersecur­ity is both protecting the computers of the world and finding security holes; it’s learning how to setup our networks and computers to protect them from threat agents who want to steal or destroy our informatio­n,” said Dwight Watt, instructor of Computer Informatio­n Systems Technology, adding that the technology also protects financial informatio­n.

“Thieves use phishing scams to ask people for informatio­n or ransomware in which they encrypt data in a form we cannot read and demand a ransom payment to get it back,” he said.

“Our financial informatio­n, medical informatio­n and personal informatio­n are all stored on computer servers, and that informatio­n becomes a target for attackers,” said Rocky Spurlock, director of GNTC’s Computer Informatio­n Systems

Technology program. “In Cybersecur­ity, our goal is to protect the confidenti­ality, integrity and availabili­ty of the data so that only the people who should have access to the data can access it, that the data has not been changed and that it is available when it is needed.”

GNTC launched its Cybersecur­ity program in 2016. Courses cover security policies and procedures, implementi­ng operating systems security, network security, network defense and countermea­sures, ethical hacking and penetratio­n testing, and computer forensics.

“It is essential that organizati­ons have trained Cybersecur­ity profession­als to protect their organizati­on’s data,” Spurlock said.

“The demand for these jobs is growing explosivel­y,” Watt explained. “Within the last year we had to wait in line for gas because threat actors encrypted informatio­n at the Colonial Pipeline. Every day we read where informatio­n is stolen and sold.

GNTC’s Cybersecur­ity program offers three career tracks. The technical certificat­e typically takes between 12 to 18 months to earn. Students take the

basic Cyber courses and no general education courses.

“The technical certificat­e is aimed particular­ly at people with an associate degree or diploma who now want to learn Cybersecur­ity,” Watt said.

The associate degree and diploma tracks take approximat­ely two years. The coursework for a diploma is almost the same, except the general education courses.

The Cybersecur­ity program is based on GNTC’s Catoosa County Campus; however, basic courses are also offered on the Floyd, Gordon, Walker, and Whitfield Murray Campuses. GNTC offers advanced courses mostly online, allowing students to be based at any campus, while some courses are offered in person.

Watt and Spurlock are the main instructor­s for the Cybersecur­ity program. Watt said he has worked in the field with various parts of Cybersecur­ity and continues to take classes on Cybersecur­ity and many other areas of informatio­n technology (IT); he holds the CySA+ and Security+ certificat­ions, along with a number of other certificat­ions. Watt holds a bachelor’s degree in Political Science and master’s degree in Business Administra­tion from Winthrop University and a doctoral degree in Education Leadership from the University of Georgia.

Spurlock received his bachelors and master’s degree in Informatio­n Technology from Kennesaw State University in Marietta. He has been an instructor for GNTC since 2009.

GNTC will host a Free Applicatio­n Week, April 11-15, to help those who are seeking to enroll in the summer semester. That week GNTC will waive the $25 applicatio­n fee for all new applicants. The admissions deadline for the summer semester is April 25. Classes are scheduled to begin on May 16.

 ?? Contribute­d ?? Dwight Watt poses with technology GNTC uses in its Cybersecur­ity program.
Contribute­d Dwight Watt poses with technology GNTC uses in its Cybersecur­ity program.

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