UC Berkeley Hosts High School Students for Cyber Training

A cyber security program sponsored by the National Security Agency has wooed 23 students to attend a six-week course at the University of California Berkeley.

The initiative is part of a nationwide effort to introduce K-12 students to safe online behavior and spark their interest in pursuing careers in the field. All over the country, the GenCyber program is delivering summer cybersecurity camp experiences.

The UC Berkeley program, named "Cybear," was intended specifically for high schoolers. Students learn basic computer science principles, methods and uses for programming in Python, as well as best practices for security and privacy.

The students come from the San Francisco bay area, which covers a wide swatch of geography in northern California.

Their activities have included a field trip to the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, a tour of the FBI offices in San Francisco and an international cyber warfare simulation.

The students have also built a model of the city of Oakland out of Lego blocks and Raspberry Pi units, which includes "smart city" features. For example, a smart sanitation system notifies the local waste management organization when it's time to pick up particular bins of garbage because they're full, thereby alleviating traffic in the city by keeping excess garbage trucks off the roads.

"It's great to work with everyone because they're from different schools and different places," said senior Neha Venkatesh, a student at Salesian College Preparatory, a high school in Richmond, in a university article about the program. "I was attracted to this camp because it was at Berkeley, especially since I want to study computer science. It's given me an idea of what it would be like to walk into a class here. It's like I'm actually taking a college class."

The course is free to students, and the university received funding from the NSA to cover class expenses.

About the Author

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

Featured

  • college student using a laptop alongside an AI robot and academic icons like a graduation cap, lightbulb, and upward arrow

    Nonprofit to Pilot Agentic AI Tool for Student Success Work

    Student success nonprofit InsideTrack has joined Salesforce Accelerator – Agents for Impact, a Salesforce initiative providing technology, funding, and expertise to help nonprofits build and customize AI agents and AI-powered tools to support and scale their missions.

  • server racks, a human head with a microchip, data pipes, cloud storage, and analytical symbols

    OpenAI, Oracle Expand AI Infrastructure Partnership

    OpenAI and Oracle have announced they will develop an additional 4.5 gigawatts of data center capacity, expanding their artificial intelligence infrastructure partnership as part of the Stargate Project, a joint venture among OpenAI, Oracle, and Japan's SoftBank Group that aims to deploy 10 gigawatts of computing capacity over four years.

  • geometric pattern features abstract icons of a dollar sign, graduation cap, and document

    Maricopa Community Colleges Adopts Platform to Combat Student Application Fraud

    In an effort to secure its admissions and financial processes, Maricopa Community Colleges has partnered with A.M. Simpkins and Associates (AMSA) to implement the company's S.A.F.E (Student Application Fraudulent Examination) across the district's 10 institutions.

  • human profile with a circuit-board brain next to an open book

    Georgia State U and Operation HOPE Program Fosters AI Literacy in Underserved Youth

    A pilot program co-led by Operation HOPE and Georgia State University is working to build technical, entrepreneurial, and financial-literacy skills in Atlanta-area youth to help them thrive in the AI-powered workforce.