4 in 10 College Faculty, Admin Unconcerned about Future Cyberattacks
- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 02/17/21
More college
administrators than college educators have received basic
cybersecurity training. While 71 percent of the administrators said
they'd been provided with some training, just 57 percent of the
teachers said the same. And even though 81 percent of educators said
they were using personal devices for remote learning, just half (50
percent) reported that their institutions had provided any guidelines
or resources for protecting those devices.
Those data points
surfaced in a survey
undertaken for IBM
Security by Morning
Consult. The survey received responses from 1,000 U.S.
educators and 200 administrators in both K-12 and higher education.
The goal was to better understand the level of cybersecurity
awareness, preparedness and training within schools and colleges
during the shift to remote teaching and learning.
More than four in 10
educators (42 percent) said they weren't particularly concerned about
their colleges or universities becoming the target of a cyberattack
in the future. Among administrators, the count was nearly as high--41
percent.
When asked what
their largest concerns were as a result of a ransomware attack at
their institutions, more than two-thirds of educators (68 percent)
mentioned worries about their personal data being compromised,
followed by the personal data of students being hit (66 percent).
Sixty-four percent said that disruption of classes and the compromise
of school records were of concern.
Among
administrators, the biggest worries mirrored that of the instructors.
Seventy-one percent listed personal data of educators being
compromised, followed by compromise of student data (68 percent).
The survey found
high numbers of faculty and instructors unfamiliar with the various
forms of cyberattacks. For example, 41 percent said they had no
familiarity with "videobombing." A third (32 percent) were
unsure what denial-of-service attacks were. Nearly three in 10 (28
percent) were unfamiliar with ransomware attacks. More college
educators knew something about data breaches (20 percent said they
weren’t familiar with those) and phishing scams (unrecognized by 13
percent).
The greatest worry
among the college segment was phishing scams affecting schools,
mentioned by 58 percent of respondents, followed by data breaches (57
percent). Among administrators, specifically, phishing scams also
dominated the list of concerns (mentioned by 64 percent), followed by
data breaches (59 percent).
Faculty were
slightly more likely than administrators to report their schools had
been hit by a cyberattack, 19 percent compared to 18 percent. But
confidence was high among both groups that their institution would be
able to manage the consequences of a cyberattack; 80 percent of
educators and 83 percent of administrators said they were "very"
or "somewhat" confident of the response.
The biggest barrier
to implementing stronger cybersecurity initiatives came down to
money. Fifty-four percent of college educators said budget was a
"large" or "medium" barrier, while 52 percent
referenced skills and 46 percent designated availability of
technology, education or awareness.
Budget was also
pinpointed as the big barrier among K-12 administrators (cited by 50
percent), versus skills (42 percent) and availability of technology
(41 percent).
"Ransomware
attacks on schools have become the new snow day for students,"
said Christopher Scott, director of security innovation in IBM's
Office of the CISO, in a statement. "Stay-at-home orders, and
the switch to remote learning, have changed the focus for
cybercriminals looking for easy targets as everyone from
kindergartners to college professors have adopted remote
technologies. And with budgets focused on new ways of learning, many
schools are in need of additional resources and technology to change
the dynamic and lower the financial ROI for the bad guys targeting
them."
The complete results
of the survey are openly available on
the IBM website.
About the Author
Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.