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| Subject: | Fwd: A question on security postgraduate programs |
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| Date: | Wed, 23 May 2007 16:14:20 +0100 |
Having been involved in a lot of interviews to fill two places in our team recently I would strongly recommend gaining work experience and possibly some relevant industry certifications if these are in line with your career goals.
While I would in no way wish to cast aspersions over the value of the various IT security masters courses as we haven't seen enough people for it to be a statistically relevant sample (indeed gaining my MSc is something I want to achieve in the next few years), but, the applicants we have had with masters have been somewhat disappointing when compared with those who had spent the time in industry.
Obviously if your goal is to be more research based then continuing in education may indeed offer more value than if your goal is to work as an analyst / pen tester etc.
Cheers
K
-----Original Message----- From: listbounce@securityfocus.com [mailto:listbounce@securityfocus.com] On Behalf Of Katelyn Rowlands Sent: 23 May 2007 00:59 To: some randomer Cc: security-basics@securityfocus.com Subject: Re: A question on security postgraduate programs
I'm a 3rd year computer science student and and I've a stronginterest
in security. Primarily, vulnerability research/reverse engineering.At
the moment I'm trying to decide what to do after I finish University.
I'm also in a very similar position right now. I am about to graduate in June with a BSc Computer Science and I want a career in security research.
I would like to work in vulnerability research or pen testing whenI'm
finished so I'm wondering if I'm better off attempting to find work straight away after I finish or getting some other qualifications first? Also if someone could recommend some decent masters/postgrad courses that would be cool.
One very good course in the UK is the MSc Information Security at UCL (http://mscinfosec.adastral.ucl.ac.uk). The fees are very high, but apparently the course is very well taught and is aimed at people who intend to work in industry afterwards. It's certainly a technical course, and UCL is a respected place.
I have a place on the above course, but have been advised to do a research MSc instead, as this is more suitable for future research work. I think it depends if you're going into the research side of things, or the industry side. If you don't know, it's always possible to do a Masters course while also finding a student placement and gaining experience, doing certs etc.
- Katelyn
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