Prepare for your career as an information systems security professional
Cybersecurity at St. Bonaventure equips you with the sophisticated tools necessary to pursue a career in computer crime investigation, information assurance and digital forensics. Cybersecurity students use their education to detect, investigate, and prevent technology related crimes.
Cybersecurity professionals in high demand
Infosec, a leading cybersecurity training company, reported earlier this year that there is a worldwide shortage of nearly 3 million in the ranks of cybersecurity professionals, and about 500,000 in North America alone.
One of the most, if not the most, shorthanded sectors of the economy right now is information security, according to cybersecurityguide.org, a website that helps prospective students and early career professionals find career opportunities.
Government and military opportunities abound
"When it comes to federal jobs in cybersecurity, the sky is the limit," Fortune magazine reported earlier this year. From system engineers and software developers to cyber defense forensics analysts and ethical hackers, there are a wide range of jobs to be filled.
"There is a lot of value for cyber students to pursue work in government sectors, with the military being a great start," said Brian Kellogg, undergraduate cybersecurity program chair and university director of information security and infrastructure.
Students may want to explore opportunities through St. Bonaventure's Department of Military Science (Army ROTC program), which offers a number of scholarships for students interested in the military. For more about such scholarships, consult the St. Bonaventure Army ROTC Scholarship Overview brochure.
Other cybersecurity career opportunities include:
- Intelligence analyst
- Computer crimes special investigator
- Information assurance specialist
- Credit card fraud investigator
- Health insurance special investigator
- Money laundering analyst
- Network administrator
- Bank security compliance officer
- Compliance, risk management and fraud supervisor
- Digital forensics examiner
Interview with Dr. Anne Foerst to be aired on Deutschlandfunk Christmas Day
Oct 11, 2019 Dr. Anne Foerst, professor
of computer science and director of St. Bonaventure's individualized major program, was interviewed for Deutschlandfunk, the German equivalent of NPR, for a show to be aired Christmas Day about theology, the churches and the challenges of artificial intelligence.
The interview was the result of Foerst's participation in German Protestant Churchday, a celebration of "everything Protestant," said Foerst. The four-day event in Dortmund, Germany, was attended by approximately 100,000 people.
In
addition to participating in a panel on artificial intelligence, Foerst gave a lecture in one of the venue's big lecture halls that was attended by several thousand people.