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University Of Missouri-St. Louis: STL CyberCon Panel Highlights Different Paths To Careers In Cybersecurity
Both degrees and certifications can be necessary for helping an applicant get consideration.
The seventh annual STL CyberCon provided a forum for people to hear and learn from leading researchers and practitioners working in the realm of cybersecurity in Missouri and far beyond.
The 4Β½-hour conference was organized and sponsored by the University of MissouriβSt. Louis and attracted more than 160 registrants when it was held virtually last Friday.
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Of particular note for the many students in attendance β including some high school classes logging in together β was a panel discussion on the relative benefits of pursuing a bachelorβs degree versus certificates in cybersecurity for those interested in breaking into the field.
Rajendra Raj, a professor in the Department of Computer Science at Rochester Institute of Technology, moderated the discussion between Vijay Anand, an associate professor of information systems and technology in UMSLβs College of Business Administration; Kathleen Bellew, a cybersecurity analyst at the Missouri Research and Education Network; JoLynn Hallmark, a senior incident responder at Verisign; and Jeremy Weidner, a senior cybersecurity analyst at Avertium.
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βWhen youβre looking at the benefits, itβs important to try and figure out what youβre trying to accomplish,β Hallmark said. βAre the benefits that you want a job? Are the benefits that you just want to learn a lot about one area? To me this question is really about figuring out what your end goal is.β
Both degrees and certifications can be necessary for helping an applicant get consideration.
βOne of the benefits of having one or the other is that they open up some doors, through HR, when youβre applying for a job to meet their requirements,β Weidner said.
As a hiring manager, Weidner said he tries to look deeper.
βAll that I really care about is whether you have the needed skills and knowledge and the ability to apply it,β he said. βOne of the best people Iβve ever hired didnβt have any formal training, but again, with a passion he had learned a lot on his own, tinkering and things like that.
βBut it is beneficial because they are structured learning programs. Because the field of cybersecurity is so large, it helps give you a guided approach.β
Whether someone opts to pursue a degree or certifications, they canβt ever be content theyβve learned everything they need to know in a field that is changing as rapidly as cybersecurity.
βHow can you instill that lifelong learning skill?β Bellew said. βIf I find that Iβm lacking in an area, then maybe is there is a certification out there I want to go for thatβs going to be more in depth and teach me more about what I need to do to better serve the people that I serve.β
When considering a four-year degree program, Anand said itβs important to be sure that itβs not set in its ways.
βLook at your program and find out where whether your program has a mature process or not,β Anand said. βIs the program evolving or not with time because this is a field that is going to evolve very fast.β
As with any career, job seekers need to make connections to get ahead.
βAfter I got my internship out of school, every other job Iβve had since then is because of the people that Iβve met,β Hallmark said. βObviously, you have to have the skills and the background, but make sure youβre doing things to meet people. These conferences are great. Thereβs the other side to it. Thereβs the technical side, and then there is the networking side.β
In addition to the panel discussion, STL CyberCon attendees had a chance to log into presentations from Jason Martin, the director of the Digital Capabilities and Security Center at the Defense Information Systems Agency; Alexander Braszko, Kansas Cityβs former chief information officer and IT program manager now working on issues of rural broadband; Connor McGarr, a Red Team Consultant at CrowdStrike; Prasad Calyam, a University of MissouriβColumbia professor researching blockchain-based cyber threat intelligence sharing and defense; and Marcus McCarty, a senior consultant for the University of Missouri Systemβs Broadband Initiative.
Abderrahmen Mtibaa, an assistant professor in UMSLβs Department of Computer Science in the College of Arts and Sciences, was one of the faculty members organizing the conference. He said he and his colleagues hope they can return to an in-person format, including a job fair and more networking opportunities, next year.
UMSL has more than 700 students enrolled in its computer science, computer technology, information systems and cybersecurity programs. The National Security Agency and Department of Homeland Security have designated UMSL a National Center of Academic Excellence in Cyber Defense Education.
This press release was produced by the University of Missouri-St. Louis. The views expressed here are the authorβs own.