By Jeff Murphy,
November 30, 2021
ŷƵ Cybersecurity students develop skills that will help
them to excel in national competition and as professionals.
WARRENSBURG, MO – Demonstrating the quality of students’ academic preparation and
skill in the area of Cybersecurity, a team of ŷƵ students
was recently ranked in the top 1 percent of college and university teams participating
in the National Cyber League (NCL) Fall 2021 Competition.
In an event that evaluated student Cybersecurity teams on nine different criteria,
UCM finished 37th out of 3,910 teams nationwide. The university has competed every
semester in NCL competitions since fall 2018. Since finishing in the top 30 percent
during that first event, the team has continuously improved its standing, and with
this recent finish it continued its upward trek from its placement in the top 2.7
percent of teams during the spring 2021 semester.
“The rank is a good indicator to see how our students perform in a short term, but
for me making continuous improvement is more important in a long term,” said Hyungbae
Park, Ph.D., coordinator of the Cybersecurity program. “This proves that we have a
good system – faculty and facility – to train and foster our students [success].”
He said the NCL is one of the major cybersecurity competitions in which students can
gain experience applying their cybersecurity knowledge to solve real-world problems.
The competition is built around learning objectives, and helps participants to further
their understanding of the field. It includes two practice challenges and two main
challenges for students at the individual and team level.
“I am glad to see our team is making good progress since fall 2018,” Park added “I’ve
enjoyed watching our students grow. I really appreciate our students going the extra
mile as consistent hard work is required to be a good performer in NCL competition.”
UCM’s team placement in the event was based on an evaluation in the following categories:
Open Source Intelligence, Cryptography, Password Cracking, Log Analysis, Network Traffic
Analysis, Forensics, Scanning and Reconnaissance, Web Application Exploitation, and
Enumeration and Exploitation. Each category gives a series of challenges and each
challenge has differentl levels of difficulty – easy, medium and hard, Park said.
The harder the challenge, the more points a team scores.
UCM offers undergraduate programs in Cybersecurity and Information Technology, as
well as a graduate program in Cybersecurity and Information Assurance within the School
of Computer Science and Mathematics. The university is one of only a small number
of institutions nationwide to offer a Cybersecurity undergraduate program that is
accredited by ABET. Learn more about these programs by clicking .
Individuals who want to know more about these programs or the NCL competition also
can contact Park at 660-543-8921 or park@ucmo.edu.