The GenCyber Camp, which runs through May 15, leads its participants through interactive cybersecurity courses and online career mentorship sessions.
Tony Coulson (cybersecurity) was interviewed about the need for more cybersecurity programs to meet the job demands in the future, David Yaghoubian (history) discussed the latest developments in the U.S. effort to rejoin the multi-national Iranian nuclear agreement, and Brian Levin (criminal justice) provided insight into a new Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism report that anti-Asian hate crimes sharply increased again in the first quarter of 2021.
Tony Coulson (cybersecurity and information and decision sciences), Brian Levin (criminal justice) and Kim Cousins (chemistry and biochemistry) were included in recent news coverage.
The prestigious designation as the Community National Center for Cybersecurity Education illustrates CSUSB’s continued prominence as the premier institution of higher education for cybersecurity education.
Tony Coulson (director, Cybersecurity Center) was interviewed about additional funding for a national cybersecurity scholarship program, and Alemayehu G. Mariam (professor emeritus,political science) wrote about the victims in two attacks in Ethiopia
In partnership with the Girl Scouts of San Gorgonio Council, CSUSB hosted its fifth GenCyber summer camp, a cybersecurity-focused, weeklong camp for middle school girls in Riverside and San Bernardino counties, from June 17-21.
The free GenCyber summer camps, held in partnership with the Girl Scouts of San Gorgonio, will run June 19-23 and June 26-30.
In late January 2018, 20 cybersecurity students from Cal State San Bernardino headed for Washington, D.C., for the competitive Internship/Job Fair. All landed jobs or internships.
Accredited nationally, the Jack H. Brown College cybersecurity program is preparing the next generation of information and electronic protection leaders.