Estrella Mountain CC Earns Designation for Power Security Training

A 5,700-student community college in Arizona recently received national recognition for its cyber-defense education programs. Estrella Mountain Community College, which is one of the 10 schools that make up the Maricopa Community Colleges system, has been designated as a National Center of Academic Excellence (CAE) by the National Security Agency and the Department of Homeland Security for its Cyber Defense Two-Year Education program.

Courses in the program focus on IT, IT security and power systems fundamentals as they relate to energy generation, transmission, distribution and embedded systems. Students are trained for IT security employment in the power plant industry as well as more general network and systems security in other segments.

"Becoming a CAE indicates that our program is meeting the highest standards for training students to protect and defend cyberspace," said Clay Goodman, the college's vice president of learning. Goodman is also the director of the Arizona Sun Corridor-Get Into Energy Consortium, a group of five colleges that received federal Trade Adjustment Assistance Community College and Career Training (TAACCCT) funding to develop degree programs for specific workforce training.

In fall 2014, Estrella teamed up with the Peoria Unified School District to offer dual and concurrent enrollment credits for the cybersecurity program to high school students. The college pathway includes the two-year cyber defense program and access to a four-year CAE program at an in-state institution.

High school students, transitioning veterans and adults seeking a new career can also join the Estrella program through open enrollment. Graduates earn an associate degree in IT and Power Systems Security (IT-PSS) through one of four tracks: power systems and IT security, Cisco-based network security, Linux systems security, and Microsoft systems security.

Twenty-eight schools received CAE designation this year; 46 states now have CAE institutions.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • Analyst or Scientist uses a computer and dashboard for analysis of information on complex data sets on computer.

    Anthropic Study Tracks AI Adoption Across Countries, Industries

    Adoption of AI tools is growing quickly but remains uneven across countries and industries, with higher-income economies using them far more per person and companies favoring automated deployments over collaborative ones, according to a recent study released by Anthropic.

  • businessmen shaking hands behind digital technology imagery

    Microsoft, OpenAI Restructure AI Partnership

    Microsoft and OpenAI announced they are redefining their partnership as part of a major recapitalization effort aimed at preparing for the arrival of artificial general intelligence (AGI).

  • computer monitor displaying a collage of AI-related icons

    Google Advances AI Image Generation with Multi-Modal Capabilities

    Google has introduced Gemini 2.5 Flash Image, marking a significant advancement in artificial intelligence systems that can understand and manipulate visual content through natural language processing.

  • Hand holding a stylus over a tablet with futuristic risk management icons

    Why Universities Are Ransomware's Easy Target: Lessons from the 23% Surge

    Academic environments face heightened risk because their collaboration-driven environments are inherently open, making them more susceptible to attack, while the high-value research data they hold makes them an especially attractive target. The question is not if this data will be targeted, but whether universities can defend it swiftly enough against increasingly AI-powered threats.