Frontline Education

Cyber Security in K-12: Is Your School District Prepared?

In a matter of decades, we’ve leapt forward a millennium in cyber technology. In the digital age, the development of new cyber tools and increasingly useful applications hasn’t shown much sign of slowing down. Unfortunately, the inherent risks haven’t either.

With so much sensitive information necessarily online, school districts must ensure protections are put in place in case of cyber malfeasance. But with ever-changing technology, it seems like some best practices are aging in dog years. How do we keep up?

State of the K-12 Cyber Landscape

The recent explosion of Edtech has drawn the majority of school districts to adopt new tools for data analytics, cloud storing, and PD. The benefits of this technology are huge, but they do come with risks. Over the last three years, there has been a definite increase in the number of K-12 security incidents.

One reason is because many school districts are easy targets. Districts often lack cyber security resources necessary to keep up with the evolving risks of cyber technology, or they don’t understand or take advantage of some of the security capabilities of the programs they use. So, for attackers, these school districts often represent the “low hanging fruit.”

A more troubling reason for the increase in incidents is the value of student information. A child’s ID and personal health information is lucrative on dark web markets. Criminals can get years of use out of a minor’s information before they reach the age where credit applications and other processes are initiated that might tip them off to the identity theft.

Government Response

Because of these risks and incidents, State legislatures have begun introducing new regulations to protect student data. As of September 2016, 49 states and the District of Columbia (all but Vermont) have introduced at least one student data privacy bill, and 36 states have at least one new student privacy law.

Districts now bear the responsibility both to put security measures in place to protect data privacy and also to validate that security through compliance.

Understanding the Cyber Kill Chain

With the increasing sophistication of cyber criminal tactics, school districts need to reassess what they can do to foil attacks before it’s too late.

Most attacks begin when a district user opens a phishing message. Through that, attackers can gain access to the user’s account information and gain access to further, more sensitive information. On average, it takes districts 146 days to identify these breaches, by which time the attackers have had their run of district information.

Building Your Defense – Key Success Factors

Building Your Security Program Using NIST’s CSF

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