Oct 26 2020
Management

Remote Learning Calls for More Coordinated Cybersecurity

As school districts push more operations online and accommodate more network users, administrators should also beef up efforts to protect it all.

The new school year had barely begun for some K–12 districts before cybercriminals struck.

In early September, several ransomware attacks against schools made headlines. The attacks halted online learning or forced officials to postpone the first day of classes — costly setbacks that compound ongoing challenges with remote learning.

Security experts are reporting an increase in the frequency of cyber incidents such as ransomware attacks, which have plagued not only schools but also businesses and cities. Across the nation, since stay-at-home restrictions went into effect, instances of cybercrime have spiked by 75 percent.

Against that backdrop, this year’s theme for National Cybersecurity Awareness Month has particular relevance for K–12 schools: Do Your Part. #BeCyberSmart.

It’s imperative that administrators step up to improve their cybersecurity and include as many stakeholders as possible in that effort. Explore options for cloud security. Complete a risk assessment to identify vulnerabilities within school networks. Ramp up training for employees and share more information with all users, including parents and students, to empower them to avoid phishing attempts and other potential scams.

We know the stakes are high for remote learning, and we understand the struggles for all involved to make it work. Districts have more operations in the cloud and, with expanded remote learning, more users on their networks. Schools are particularly vulnerable to attacks for myriad reasons.

“One minute of student downtime is a problem for our core organizational objectives,” says Wade Barnes, executive director of infrastructure and support for the DeKalb County (Ga.) School District.

READ MORE: Wade Barnes explains how the pandemic changed the role of a K–12 IT leader.

Some K–12 students have missed as much as six months of instruction because of pandemic-spurred school closings. Every minute added to that count worsens educational disparities and expands the work educators must do to get students caught up academically.

Without more investment of time and resources in cybersecurity, the cost to schools, their students and teachers will be great.

Arkadiusz Warguła/Getty Images

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