Master's Degree in Cybersecurity Curriculum | 36 credit hours
The core of the cybersecurity master's degree curriculum is a carefully designed sequence of hands-on technical courses, management courses with leadership experiences, student-designed research, presentation opportunities, and a capstone.
Our faculty has designed a system of 4 “blocks” to provide the optimal developmental pathway through the courses. In this structure, all course prerequisites are included in prior blocks. This is the curriculum order for this program.
Block 1 | 9 credit hours
The master’s curriculum begins with the development of baseline cybersecurity principles and skills for individual practitioners, including the technical and management foundational skills covered in the GSEC, GCIH, and GSTRT certification exams.
ISE 5101: Security Essentials | SEC401 + GSEC
SANS Course: SEC401: Security Essentials - Network, Endpoint, and Cloud
Certification: GIAC Security Essentials (GSEC)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 5101 is the introductory, technically-oriented survey course in the information security engineering master's program. It establishes the foundations for designing, building, maintaining and assessing security functions at the end-user, network and enterprise levels of an organization. The faculty instruction, readings, lab exercises, and exam are coordinated to introduce and develop the core technical, management, and enterprise-level capabilities that will be developed throughout the information security engineering master's program.
ISE 5201: Hacker Tools, Techniques, Exploits, & Incident Handling | SEC504 + GCIH
SANS Course: SEC504: Hacker Tools, Techniques, and Incident Handling
Certification: GIAC Certified Incident Handler Certification (GCIH)
3 Credit Hours
By adopting the viewpoint of a hacker, ISE 5201 provides an in-depth focus into the critical activity of incident handling. Students are taught how to manage intrusions by first looking at the techniques used by attackers to exploit a system. Students learn responses to those techniques, which can be adopted within the framework of the incident handling process to handle attacks in an organized way. The faculty instruction, lab exercises, and exam are coordinated to develop and test a student's ability to utilize the core capabilities required for incident handling.
ISE 5601: IT Security Planning, Policy, & Leadership | LDR514 + GSTRT
SANS Course: LDR514: Security Strategic Planning, Policy, and Leadership
Certification: GIAC Strategic Planning, Policy, and Leadership (GSTRT)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 5601 gives you tools to become a security business leader who can build and execute strategic plans that resonate with other business executives, create effective information security policy, and develop management and leadership skills to better lead, inspire, and motivate your teams. The course will help you to develop strategic plans, create effective information security policy, and develop management and leadership skills using case studies from Harvard Business School, case scenarios, team-based exercises, and discussions that put you in real-world situations.
Block 2 | 9.5 credit hours
You’ll move onto more intermediary skills in Block 2, applying and synthesizing your knowledge at the organizational level, including skills required for the GDSA, GCIA, and SSAP exams. The first half of the program concludes with a hands-on group project and the Core Comprehensive Exam, which ensures you have mastered foundational skills before moving onto more advanced coursework.
ISE 6255: Defensible Security Architecture & Engineering | SEC530 + GDSA
SANS Course: SEC530: Defensible Security Architecture and Engineering: Implementing Zero Trust for the Hybrid Enterprise
Certification: GIAC Defensible Security Architect Certification (GDSA)
3 Credit Hours
Effective security requires a balance between detection, prevention, and response capabilities. Defensible Security Architecture and Engineering is designed to help you establish and maintain a holistic and layered approach to security. You’ll explore the fundamentals of up-to-date defensible security architecture and how to engineer it, with a heavy focus on leveraging current infrastructure (and investment), including switches, routers, and firewalls. You’ll learn how to reconfigure these devices to significantly improve your organization’s prevention capabilities in the face of today's dynamic threat landscape. The course will also delve into the latest technologies and their capabilities, strengths, and weaknesses. Multiple hands-on labs will reinforce key points in the course and provide actionable skills you will be able to leverage immediately at work.
ISE 5433: Managing Human Risk | LDR433 + SSAP
SANS Course: LDR433: Managing Human Risk
Certification: SANS Security Awareness Professional (SSAP)
2 Credit Hours
From phishing attacks and credential stuffing to lost devices or auto-complete in email, human risk has become the primary risk for most organizations. One of the most effective ways for an organization to manage its human risk is to build on their existing technical controls with a mature security awareness program. The program must go beyond just compliance and change organizational behaviors and ultimately, culture. In ISE 5433, you will learn the key concepts and skills to plan, maintain, and measure an effective security awareness program that makes an organization both more secure and compliant. Through a series of labs and exercises, you will develop your security awareness plan and also complete the SSAP exam.
ISE 5401: Intrusion Detection In-Depth | SEC503 + GCIA
SANS Course: SEC503: Network Monitoring and Threat Detection In-Depth
Certification: GIAC Certified Intrusion Analyst Certification (GCIA)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 5401 delivers the technical knowledge, insight, and hands-on training you need to defend your network with confidence. You will learn about the underlying theory of TCP/IP and the most used application protocols, such as DNS and HTTP, so that you can intelligently examine network traffic for signs of an intrusion. You will get plenty of practice learning to master different open source tools like tcpdump, Wireshark, Snort, Bro, tshark, and SiLK. Daily hands-on exercises suitable for all experience levels reinforce the course book material so that you can transfer knowledge to execution.
ISE 5701: Situational Response Practicum
Assessment: Written report
1 Credit HourIn ISE 5701, you and a small group of students will learn and be assessed on your ability to come together as a team, evaluate a situation, develop a response, and prepare recommendations for decision to a C-Level audience within forty-five (45) days. You will be put into a small group with other students and presented with an information security topic prompt. Your group will prepare a plan for researching and reporting on the assignment. Once the plan is prepared, the group will execute the plan, adjusting as necessary, to develop a report of the research completed and recommended actions.
ISE 5002: Core Comprehensive Exam
0.5 Credit Hours
The Core Comprehensive Exam tests your mastery of the core technical skills required by top security consultants and individual practitioners. Through a series of exercises, you’ll demonstrate your ability to integrate the knowledge, skills, and techniques acquired in ISE 5101, ISE 5201, and ISE 5401 to address common challenges faced by technical leaders in the cybersecurity field.
Block 3 | 9 credit hours
ISE 5001: Security Leadership Essentials for Managers | LDR512 + GSLC
SANS Course: LDR512: Security Leadership Essentials for Managers
Certification: GIAC Security Leadership (GSLC)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 5001 uses case studies, group discussions, team-based exercises, in-class games, and a security leadership simulation to help you absorb both technical and management topics. Covering a wide range of security topics across the entire security stack, this course empowers you to become an effective security manager and get up to speed quickly on information security issues and terminology. Data, network, host, application, and user controls are examined in conjunction with key management topics that address the overall security lifecycle, including governance and technical controls focused on protecting, detecting, and responding to security issues.
ISE 6___: Elective | SANS Class + GIAC Exam
3 Credit Hours
In Block 3, you’ll choose 3 different technical courses from those listed in the “Elective Courses and Special Focus Areas” section below. You can take a generalist approach and select any 3 electives or choose electives within one of our optional Special Focus Areas.
ISE 6___: Elective | SANS Class + GIAC Exam
3 Credit Hours
In Block 3, you’ll choose 3 different technical courses from those listed in the “Elective Courses and Special Focus Areas” section below. You can take a generalist approach and select any 3 electives or choose electives within one of our optional Special Focus Areas.
Block 4 | 8.5 credit hours
Block 4 is a year of culminating practicums where you will integrate all foundational and specialized skills learned in the program. You’ll finish your electives, hone your skills in NetWars Continuous, demonstrate executive-level communication in a hands-on group project, and contribute to the cybersecurity community through a unique capstone research project of your own design.
ISE 5009: Research Methods
0.5 Credit Hours
This course will prepare you to conduct graduate-level research exploring a current applied cyber security problem. You will learn how to select an appropriate research question, design an experiment, and analyze the experiment's outcome to answer the research question. Students will develop a proposal for the research paper to be written in ISE 5901: Advanced Technical Research & Communication Practicum and learn how to complete the research paper requirements for the practicum.
ISE 6101: Security Project Practicum
Assessment: Oral Presentation, Writing Exercise
1 Credit HourIn ISE 6101, you and a small group of students will learn and be assessed on your ability to come together as a team, evaluate a situation, demonstrate leadership, develop a response, and prepare and present recommendations for a decision to a C-Level audience within 24-hours. This course builds on what you have learned in other courses and allows you to apply that knowledge. You will be put into a small group with other students and presented with an information security topic prompt. Working as a group, you will analyze the situation, develop a technical response, and establish recommendations for an organizational response to the situation presented. After your team develops a recommended response, the group will provide written and oral reports of recommendations for action to a mixed technical/non-technical audience of executives for decision.
ISE 6___: Elective | SANS Class + GIAC Exam
3 Credit Hours
In Block 3, you’ll choose 3 different technical courses from those listed in the “Elective Courses and Special Focus Areas” section below. You can take a generalist approach and select any 3 electives or choose electives within one of our optional Special Focus Areas.
ISE 6300: NetWars Continuous Practicum
1 Credit Hour
NetWars Continuous is an online training program that guides you through hands-on lessons to locate vulnerabilities, exploit diverse machines, and analyze systems. NetWars provides a forum to test and perfect cyber security skills in a manner that is legal and ethical. You will face challenges derived from real-world environments and actual attacks that businesses, governments, and military organizations must deal with every day.
ISE 5901: Advanced Technical Research & Communication Practicum
3 Credit Hours
ISE 5901 is an advanced graduate-level research and presentation course in which you will identify, investigate and analyze a problem. You will write a research paper interpreting the data collected and making recommendations for action. The paper will reflect original work towards a new practice, solution, tool, policy, or paradigm offering the potential for real impact in the field of information security. You will then convert written material to an oral webinar presentation in order to inform a technical audience about the topic.
Elective Courses and Special Focus Areas
In Blocks 3 & 4, students in the master’s degree program choose 3 different technical courses from those listed below. Each elective course is 3 credit hours and has a course term of 3 months.
As a cybersecurity degree candidate, you can choose from two options:
- Take a generalist approach and select any 3 electives below, or
- Choose electives within one of our six optional Special Focus Areas highlighted below, to deepen your expertise in a specialized area of information security
Cloud Security | Special Focus Area (Optional)
To pursue this Special Focus Area, select three of the following courses.
ISE 6442: Enterprise Cloud Forensics and Incident Response | FOR509 + GCFR
SANS Course: FOR509: Enterprise Cloud Forensics and Incident Response
Certification: GIAC Cloud Forensics Responder (GCFR)
3 Credit Hours
In ISE 6442: Enterprise Cloud Forensics and Incident Response, examiners will learn how each of the major cloud service providers (Microsoft Azure, Amazon AWS and Google Cloud Platform) are extending analyst's capabilities with new evidence sources not available in traditional on-premise investigations. Incident response and forensics are primarily about following breadcrumbs left behind by attackers. This class is primarily a log analysis class to help examiners come up to speed quickly with cloud based investigation techniques. Numerous hands-on labs throughout the course will allow you to access evidence generated based on the most common incidents and investigations. You will learn where to pull data from and how to analyze it to find evil.
ISE 6610: Cloud Security Essentials | SEC488 + GCLD
SANS Course: SEC488: Cloud Security Essentials
Certification: GIAC Cloud Security Essentials Certification (GCLD)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6610: Cloud Security Essentials will equip you to implement appropriate security controls in the cloud, often using automation to "inspect what you expect." Mature cloud service providers (CSPs) have created a variety of security services that can help customers use their products in a more secure manner, but much about cloud security still resides with the customer organization. This course covers real-world lessons using security services created by the CSPs as well as open-source tools. Each lesson features hands-on lab exercises to help you practice the lessons learned. You will progressively layer multiple security controls in order to end the course with a functional security architecture implemented in the cloud. The course begins by addressing one of the most crucial aspects of the cloud — Identity and Access Management (IAM). From there, you will learn to secure the cloud through discussion and practical, hands-on exercises related to several key topics to defend various cloud workloads operating in the different CSP models of: Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS), Platform as a Service (PaaS), and Software as a Service (SaaS).
You will be able to:
- Identify the risks and risk control ownership based on the deployment models and service delivery models of the various products offered by cloud service providers (CSPs)
- Evaluate the trustworthiness of CSPs based on their security documentation, service features, third-party attestations, and position in the global cloud ecosystem
- Create accounts and use the services of any one the leading CSPs and be comfortable with the self-service nature of the public cloud, including finding documentation, tutorials, pricing, and security features
- Articulate the business and security implications of a multi-cloud strategy
- Secure access to the consoles used to access the CSP environments
- Use command line interfaces to query assets and identities in the cloud environment
- Use hardening benchmarks, patching, and configuration management to achieve and maintain an engineered state of security for the cloud environment
- Evaluate the logging services of various CSPs and use those logs to provide the necessary accountability for events that occur in the cloud environment
- Configure the command line interface (CLI) and properly protect the access keys to minimize the risk of compromised credentials
- Use basic Bash and Python scripts to automate tasks in the cloud
- Implement network security controls that are native to both AWS and Azure
- Employ an architectural pattern to automatically create and provision patched and hardened virtual machine images to multiple AWS accounts
- Use Azure Security Center to audit the configuration in an Azure deployment and identify security issues
- Use Terraform to deploy a complete "infrastructure as code" environment to multiple cloud providers
- Leverage the Cloud Security Alliance Cloud Controls Matrix to select the appropriate security controls for a given cloud network security architecture and assess a CSP's implementation of those controls using audit reports and the CSP's shared responsibility model
- Follow the penetration testing guidelines put forth by AWS and Azure to invoke your "inner red teamer" to compromise a full stack cloud application
- Use logs from cloud services and virtual machines hosted in the cloud to detect a security incident and take appropriate steps as a first responder according to a recommended incident response methodology
- Perform a preliminary forensic file system analysis of a compromised virtual machine to identify indicators of compromise and create a file system timeline
ISE 6612: Cloud Security Controls and Mitigations | SEC510 + GPCS
SANS Course: SEC510: Cloud Security Controls and Mitigations
Certification: GIAC Public Cloud Security (GPCS)
3 Credit Hours
Today's organizations depend on complex, multicloud environments which must support hundreds of different services across multiple clouds. These services are often insecure by default. Similar services in different Cloud Service Providers (CSPs) need to be protected using very different methods. Security teams need a deep understanding of AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud services to lock them down properly. Checking off compliance requirements is not enough to protect the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of your organization's data, nor will it prevent attackers from taking your critical systems down. With the right controls, organizations can reduce their attack surface and prevent security incidents from becoming breaches. Mistakes happen. Limit the impact of the inevitable.Skills Learned
- Make informed decisions in the Big 3 cloud service providers by understanding the inner workings of each of their Platform as a Service (PaaS) and Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) offerings
- Implement secure Identity and Access Management (IAM) with multiple layers of defense-in-depth
- Build and secure multi cloud networks with segmentation and access control
- Encrypt data at rest and in-transit throughout each cloud
- Control the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of data in each cloud storage service
- Support non-traditional computing platforms like Application Services and serverless Functions as a Service (FaaS)
- Integrate each cloud provider with one another without the use of long-lived credentials
- Automate security and compliance checks using cloud-native platforms
- Guide engineering teams in enforcing security controls using Terraform and Infrastructure-as-Code (IaC)
ISE 6615: Defending Web Applications Security Essentials | SEC522 + GWEB
SANS Course: SEC522: Application Security: Securing Web Applications, APIs, and Microservices
Certification: GIAC Certified Web Application Defender (GWEB)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6615 presents mitigation strategies from an infrastructure, architecture, and coding perspective alongside real-world techniques that have been proven to work. The course introduces the nature of each vulnerability to help you understand why it happens, then shows you how to identify the vulnerability and provide options to mitigate it.
To maximize the benefit for a wider range of audiences, the discussions in this course will be programming language agnostic. The focus will be maintained on security strategies rather than coding-level implementation.
The course is particularly well suited to application security analysts, developers, application architects, pen testers, auditors who are interested in recommending proper mitigations for web security issues, and infrastructure security professionals who have an interest in enhancing the defense of web applications. The course will also cover additional issues the authors have found to be important in their day-to-day web application development practices.
The topics covered include:
- The OWASP Top 10
- Selected specific web application issues from the Common Weakness Enumeration (CWE) Top 25 Most Dangerous Software Errors
- Infrastructure security and configuration management
- Securely integrating cloud components into a web application
- Authentication and authorization mechanisms, including single sign-on patterns
- Application language configuration
- Application coding errors like SQL injection, cross-site request forgery, and cross-site scripting
- Web 2.0 and its use of web services (REST/SOAP)
- Cross-domain web request security
- Business logic flaws
- Protective HTTP headers
ISE 6630: Cloud Penetration Testing | SEC588 + GCPN
SANS Course: SEC588: Cloud Penetration Testing
Certification: GIAC Cloud Penetration Tester (GCPN)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6630 dives into the latest in penetration testing techniques focused on the cloud, how to assess cloud environments, as well as other new topics that appear in the cloud like microservices, in-memory data stores, files in the cloud, serverless functions, Kubernetes meshes, and containers. The course also specifically covers Azure and AWS penetration testing, which is particularly important given that Amazon Web Services and Microsoft account for more than half of the market. The goal is not to demonstrate these technologies, but rather to teach you how to assess and report on the true risk that the organization could face if these services are left insecure.
Students will be able to:
- Conduct cloud-based penetration tests
- Assess cloud environments and bring value back to the business by locating vulnerabilities
- Understand how cloud environments are constructed and how to scale factors into the gathering of evidence
- Assess security risks in Amazon and Microsoft Azure environments
ISE 6650: Cloud Security and DevSecOps Automation | SEC540 + GCSA
SANS Course: SEC540: Cloud Security and DevSecOps Automation
Certification: GIAC Cloud Security Automation (GCSA)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6650 provides development, operations, and security professionals with a methodology to build and deliver secure infrastructure and software using DevOps and cloud services. Students will explore how DevOps principles, practices, and tools of DevOps can improve the reliability, integrity, and security of on-premise and cloud-hosted applications. You will gain hands-on experience using popular tools such as Jenkins, GitLab, Puppet, Vault, and Grafana to automate Configuration Management ("Infrastructure as Code"), Continuous Integration (CI), Continuous Delivery (CD), cloud infrastructure, containerization, micro-segmentation, Functions as a Service (FaaS), Compliance as Code, and Continuous Monitoring.
You will be prepared to:
- Recognize how DevOps works and identify keys to success
- Utilize Continuous Integration, Continuous Delivery, and Continuous Deployment workflows, patterns, and tools
- Identify the security risks and issues associated with DevOps and Continuous Delivery
- Use DevOps practices to secure DevOps tools and workflows
- Conduct effective risk assessments and threat modeling in a rapidly changing environment
- Design and write automated security tests and checks in CI/CD
- Understand the strengths and weaknesses of different automated testing approaches in Continuous Delivery
- Implement self-serve security services for developers
- Inventory and patch your software dependencies
- Threat model and secure your build and deployment environment
- Automate configuration management using Infrastructure as Code
- Secure container technologies (such as Docker and Kubernetes)
- Build continuous monitoring feedback loops from production to engineering
- Securely manage secrets for continuous integration servers and applications
- Automate compliance and security policy scanning
- Understand how to automate cloud architecture components
- Use CloudFormation and Terraform to create Infrastructure as Code
- Build CI/CD pipelines using Jenkins and CodePipeline
- Wire security scanning into Jenkins and CodePipeline workflows
- Containerize applications with Elastic Container Service and Azure Kubernetes Service
- Integrate cloud logging and metrics with Grafana
- Create Slack alerts from CloudWatch metrics
- Manage secrets with Vault, KMS, and the SSM Parameter store
- Protect static content with CloudFront Signatures
- Leverage Elastic Container Service for blue/green deployments
- Secure REST APIs with API Gateway
- Implement an API Gateway custom authorization Lambda function
- Deploy the AWS WAF and build custom WAF rules
- Perform continuous compliance scans with CloudMapper
- Enforce cloud configuration policies with Cloud Custodian
ISE 6655: Cloud Security Threat Detection | SEC541 + GCTD
SANS Course: SEC541: Cloud Security Threat Detection
Certification: GIAC Cloud Threat Detection (GCTD)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6655 provides hands-on-keyboard experience through 21 practical labs, covering AWS, Azure, and Microsoft 365. This course empowers your team to master cloud-native logging, threat detection, and monitoring, solving hidden, low-hanging but high ROI issues. Equip your team with the skills to necessary to enhance your organization's cloud security posture and stay ahead of potential breaches with SEC541.
Cyber Defense Operations | Special Focus Area (Optional)
To pursue this Special Focus Area, select three of the following courses.
ISE 6215: Advanced Security Essentials | SEC501 + GCED
SANS Course: SEC501: Advanced Security Essentials - Enterprise Defender
Certification: GIAC Certified Enterprise Defender (GCED)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6215 reinforces the theme that prevention is ideal, but detection is a must. Students will learn how to ensure that their organizations constantly improve their security posture to prevent as many attacks as possible. A key focus is on data protection, securing critical information no matter whether it resides on a server, in robust network architectures, or on a portable device.
Despite an organization's best effort at preventing attacks and protecting its critical data, some attacks will still be successful. Therefore students will also learn how to detect attacks in a timely fashion through an in-depth understanding the traffic that flows on networks, scanning for indications of an attack. The course also includes instruction on performing penetration testing, vulnerability analysis, and forensics.
ISE 6240: Cybersecurity Engineering: Advanced Threat Detection and Monitoring | SEC511 + GMON
SANS Course: SEC511: Cybersecurity Engineering: Advanced Threat Detection and Monitoring
Certification: GIAC Continuous Monitoring Certification (GMON)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6240 teaches a proactive approach to enterprise security that presumes attackers will penetrate your environment and therefore emphasizes timely incident detection. The Defensible Security Architecture, Network Security Monitoring, Continuous Diagnostics and Mitigation, and Continuous Security Monitoring taught in this course - aligned with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) guidelines described in NIST SP 800-137 for Continuous Monitoring (CM) - are designed to enable you and your organization to analyze threats and detect anomalies that could indicate cybercriminal behavior.
ISE 6250: Purple Team Tactics & Kill Chain Defenses | SEC599 + GDAT
SANS Course: SEC599: Defeating Advanced Adversaries - Purple Team Tactics & Kill Chain Defenses
Certification: GIAC Defending Advanced Threats (GDAT)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6250 leverages the purple team concept by bringing together red and blue teams for maximum effect. Recognizing that a prevent-only strategy is not sufficient, the course focuses on current attack strategies and how they can be effectively mitigated and detected using a Kill Chain structure. Throughout the course, the purple team principle will be maintained, where attack techniques are first explained in-depth, after which effective security controls are introduced and implemented.
ISE 6270: Applied Data Science and AI/Machine Learning for Cybersecurity Professionals | SEC595 + GMLE
SANS Course: SEC595: Applied Data Science and AI/Machine Learning for Cybersecurity Professionals
Certification: GIAC Machine Learning Engineer (GMLE)
3 Credit Hours
This course is squarely centered on solving information security problems. This course covers the necessary mathematics theory and fundamentals students absolutely must know to allow them to understand and apply the machine learning tools and techniques effectively. The course progressively introduces and applies various statistic, probabilistic, or mathematic tools (in their applied form), allowing you to leave with the ability to use those tools. The hands-on projects provide a broad base from which you can build your own machine learning solutions. This course teaches how AI tools like ChatGPT really work so that you can intelligently discuss their potential use by organizations and how to build effective solutions to solve real cybersecurity problems using machine learning and AI.
Incident Response | Special Focus Area (Optional)
To pursue this Special Focus Area, select three of the following courses.
ISE 6420: Computer Forensic Investigations - Windows | FOR500 + GCFE
SANS Course: FOR500: Windows Forensic Analysis
Certification: GIAC Certified Forensic Examiner (GCFE)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6420 Computer Forensic Investigations - Windows focuses on the critical knowledge of the Windows Operating System that every digital forensic analyst needs to investigate computer incidents successfully. Students learn how computer forensic analysts focus on collecting and analyzing data from computer systems to track user-based activity that can be used in internal investigations or civil/criminal litigation. The course covers the methodology of in-depth computer forensic examinations, digital investigative analysis, and media exploitation so each student will have complete qualifications to work as a computer forensic investigator helping to solve and fight crime.
ISE 6425: Advanced Digital Forensics, Incident Response, & Threat Hunting | FOR508 + GCFA
SANS Course: FOR508: Advanced Incident Response, Threat Hunting, and Digital Forensics
Certification: GIAC Certified Forensic Analyst (GCFA)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6425 teaches the necessary capabilities for forensic analysts and incident responders to identify and counter a wide range of threats within enterprise networks, including economic espionage, hacktivism, and financial crime syndicates. The course shows students how to work as digital forensic analysts and incident response team members to identify, contain, and remediate sophisticated threats-including nation-state sponsored Advanced Persistent Threats and financial crime syndicates. Students work in a hands-on lab developed from a real-world targeted attack on an enterprise network in order to learn how to identify what data might be stolen and by whom, how to contain a threat, and how to manage and counter an attack.
ISE 6440: Advanced Network Forensics and Analysis | FOR572 + GNFA
SANS Course: FOR572: Advanced Network Forensics: Threat Hunting, Analysis, and Incident Response
Certification: GIAC Network Forensic Analyst (GNFA)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6440: Advanced Network Forensics and Analysis focuses on the most critical skills needed to mount efficient and effective post-incident response investigations. Moving beyond the host-focused experiences in ISE 6420 and ISE 6425, ISE 6440 covers the tools, technology, and processes required to integrate network evidence sources into investigations, covering high-level NetFlow analysis, low-level pcap exploration, and ancillary network log examination. Hands-on exercises in FOR 572 cover a wide range of open source and commercial tools, and real-world scenarios help the student learn the underlying techniques and practices to best evaluate the most common types of network-based attacks.
ISE 6442: Enterprise Cloud Forensics and Incident Response | FOR509 + GCFR
SANS Course: FOR509: Enterprise Cloud Forensics and Incident Response
Certification: GIAC Cloud Forensics Responder (GCFR)
3 Credit Hours
In ISE 6442: Enterprise Cloud Forensics and Incident Response, examiners will learn how each of the major cloud service providers (Microsoft Azure, Amazon AWS and Google Cloud Platform) are extending analyst's capabilities with new evidence sources not available in traditional on-premise investigations. Incident response and forensics are primarily about following breadcrumbs left behind by attackers. This class is primarily a log analysis class to help examiners come up to speed quickly with cloud based investigation techniques. Numerous hands-on labs throughout the course will allow you to access evidence generated based on the most common incidents and investigations. You will learn where to pull data from and how to analyze it to find evil.
ISE 6445: Cyber Threat Intelligence | FOR578 + GCTI
SANS Course: FOR578: Cyber Threat Intelligence
Certification: GIAC Cyber Threat Intelligence (GCTI)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6445 will equip you, your security team, and your organization in the tactical, operational, and strategic level cyber threat intelligence skills and tradecraft required to better understand the evolving threat landscape and to counter those threats accurately and effectively. This course focuses on structured analysis to establish a solid foundation for any security skillset and to amplify existing skills.
ISE 6450: Advanced Smartphone Forensics | FOR585 + GASF
SANS Course: FOR585: Smartphone Forensic Analysis In-Depth
Certification: GIAC Advanced Smartphone Forensics Certification (GASF)
3 Credit Hours
The focus of ISE 6450 is on teaching students how to perform forensic examinations on devices such as mobile phones and tablets. Students will add to their forensics skills with this course's focus on the advanced skills of mobile forensics, device file system analysis, mobile application behavior, event artifact analysis and the identification and analysis of mobile device malware. Students will learn how to detect, decode, decrypt, and correctly interpret evidence recovered from mobile devices. The course features a number of hands-on labs that allow students to analyze different datasets from smart devices and leverage the best forensic tools and custom scripts to learn how smartphone data hide and can be easily misinterpreted by forensic tools.
ISE 6455: Mac and iOS Forensic Analysis and Incident Response | FOR518 + GIME
SANS Course: FOR518: Mac and iOS Forensic Analysis and Incident Response
Certification: GIAC iOS and macOS Examiner (GIME)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6455 provides the techniques and skills necessary to take on any Mac or iOS case without hesitation. The intense hands-on forensic analysis and incident response skills taught in the course will enable students to broaden their capabilities and gain the confidence and knowledge to comfortably analyze any Mac or iOS device. In addition to traditional investigations, the course presents intrusion and incident response scenarios to help analysts learn ways to identify and hunt down attackers that have compromised Apple devices.
ISE 6608: Enterprise-Class Incident Response & Threat | FOR608 + GEIR
SANS Course: FOR608: Enterprise-Class Incident Response & Threat Hunting
Certification: GIAC Enterprise Incident Response (GEIR)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6608 focuses on identifying and responding to incidents too large to focus on individual machines. The concepts are similar: gathering, analyzing, and making decisions based on information from hundreds of machines. This requires the ability to automate and the ability to quickly focus on the right information for analysis. By using example tools built to operate at enterprise-class scale, students will learn the techniques to collect focused data for incident response and threat hunting. Students will then dig into analysis methodologies, learning multiple approaches to understand attacker movement and activity across hosts of varying functions and operating systems by using timeline, graphing, structured, and unstructured analysis techniques.
ISE 6460: Reverse-Engineering Malware | FOR610 + GREM
SANS Course: FOR610: Reverse-Engineering Malware: Malware Analysis Tools and Techniques
Certification: GIAC Reverse Engineering Malware Certification (GREM)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6460 teaches students how to examine and reverse engineer malicious programs - spyware, bots, Trojans, etc. - that target or run on Microsoft Windows, within browser environments such as JavaScript or Flash files, or within malicious document files (including Word and PDF). The course builds a strong foundation for reverse-engineering malicious software using a variety of system and network monitoring utilities, a disassembler, a debugger and other tools. The malware analysis process taught in this class helps students understand how incident responders assess the severity and repercussions of a situation that involves malicious software and plan recovery steps. Students also experience how forensics investigators learn to understand key characteristics of malware discovered during the examination, including how to establish indicators of compromise (IOCs) for scoping and containing the incident.
Industrial Control Systems | Special Focus Area (Optional)
To pursue this Special Focus Area, complete the following three courses.
ISE 6515: ICS/SCADA Security Essentials | ICS410 + GICSP
SANS Course: ICS410: ICS/SCADA Security Essentials
Certification: Global Industrial Cyber Security Professional Certification (GICSP)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6515 ICS/SCADA Security Essentials is an introductory study of how information technologies and operational technologies have converged in today's industrial control system environments. This convergence has led to a greater need than ever for a common understanding between the various groups who support or rely on these systems. Students in ISE 6515 will learn the language, the underlying theory, and the basic tools for industrial control system security in settings across a wide range of industry sectors and applications.
ISE 6520: ICS Active Defense and Incident Response | ICS515 + GRID
SANS Course: ICS515: ICS Visibility, Detection, and Response
Certification: GIAC Response and Industrial Defense (GRID)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6520 will empower students to understand their networked industrial control system environment, monitor it for threats, perform incident response against identified threats, and learn from interactions with the adversary to enhance network security.
ISE 6525: Essentials for NERC Critical Infrastructure Protection | ICS456 + GCIP
SANS Course: ICS456: Essentials for NERC Critical Infrastructure Protection
Certification: GIAC Critical Infrastructure Protection Certification (GCIP)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6525 empowers students with knowledge of the "what" and the "how" of the version 5/6 standards. The course addresses the role of FERC, NERC and the Regional Entities, provides multiple approaches for identifying and categorizing BES Cyber Systems and helps asset owners determine the requirements applicable to specific implementations. Additionally, the course covers implementation strategies for the version 5/6 requirements with a balanced practitioner approach to both cybersecurity benefits, as well as regulatory compliance.
Penetration Testing | Special Focus Area (Optional)
To pursue this Special Focus Area, select three of the following courses.
ISE 6315: Web App Penetration Testing and Ethical Hacking | SEC542 + GWAPT
SANS Course: SEC542: Web App Penetration Testing and Ethical Hacking
Certification: GIAC Web Application Penetration Tester (GWAPT)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6315 is a highly technical information security course in offensive strategies where students learn the art of exploiting Web applications so they can find flaws in enterprise Web apps before they are otherwise discovered and exploited. Through detailed, hands-on exercises students learn the four-step process for Web application penetration testing. Students will inject SQL into back-end databases, learning how attackers exfiltrate sensitive data. They then utilize cross-site scripting attacks to dominate a target infrastructure in a unique hands-on laboratory environment. Finally students explore various other Web app vulnerabilities in-depth with tried-and-true techniques for finding them using a structured testing regimen.
ISE 6320: Enterprise Penetration Testing | SEC560 + GPEN
SANS Course: SEC560: Enterprise Penetration Testing
Certification: GIAC Penetration Tester Certification (GPEN)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6320 prepares students to conduct successful penetration testing and ethical hacking projects. The course starts with proper planning, scoping and recon, and then dives deep into scanning, target exploitation, password attacks, and wireless and web apps with detailed hands-on exercises and practical tips for doing the job safely and effectively. Students will participate in an intensive, hands-on Capture the Flag exercise, conducting a penetration test against a sample target organization.
ISE 6325: Mobile Device Security & Ethical Hacking | SEC575 + GMOB
SANS Course: SEC575: iOS and Android Application Security Analysis and Penetration Testing
Certification: GIAC Mobile Device Security Analyst (GMOB)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6325 helps students resolve their organization's struggles with mobile device security by equipping then with the skills needed to design, deploy, operate, and assess a well-managed secure mobile environment. From practical policy development to network architecture design and deployment, and mobile code analysis to penetration testing and ethical hacking, this course teaches students to build the critical skills necessary to support the secure deployment and use of mobile phones and tablets in their organization.
ISE 6330: Wireless Penetration Testing & Ethical Hacking | SEC617 + GAWN
SANS Course: SEC617: Wireless Penetration Testing and Ethical Hacking
Certification: GIAC Assessing and Auditing Wireless Networks (GAWN)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6330 takes an in-depth look at the security challenges of many different wireless technologies, exposing students to wireless security threats through the eyes of an attacker. Using readily available and custom-developed tools, students will navigate through the techniques attackers use to exploit WiFi networks, Bluetooth devices, and a variety of other wireless technologies. Using assessment and analysis techniques, this course will show students how to identify the threats that expose wireless technology and build on this knowledge to implement defensive techniques that can be used to protect wireless systems.
ISE 6350: Automating Information Security with Python | SEC573 + GPYC
SANS Course: SEC573: Automating Information Security with Python
Certification: GIAC Python Coder (GPYC)
3 Credit Hours
The ISE 6350 course teaches student in the pen testing specialization, and other students who want to use the Python programming language, how to enhance their overall effectiveness during information security engagements. Students will learn how to apply core programming concepts and techniques learned in other courses through the Python programming language. The course teaches skills and techniques that can enhance an information security professional in penetration tests, security operations, and special projects. Students will create simple Python-based tools to interact with network traffic, create custom executables, test and interact with databases and websites, and parse logs or sets of data.
ISE 6360: Advanced Penetration Testing, Exploit Writing, & Ethical Hacking | SEC660 + GXPN
SANS Course: SEC660: Advanced Penetration Testing, Exploit Writing, and Ethical Hacking
Certification: GIAC Exploit Researcher and Advanced Penetration Tester (GXPN)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6360 builds upon ISE 6320 - Enterprise Penetration Testing. This advanced course introduces students to the most prominent and powerful attack vectors, allowing students to perform these attacks in a variety of hands-on scenarios. This course is an elective course in the Penetration Testing & Ethical Hacking certificate program, and an elective choice for the master's program in Information Security Engineering.
ISE 6370: Red Team Operations and Adversary Emulation | SEC565 + GRTP
SANS Course: SEC565: Red Team Operations and Adversary Emulation
Certification: GIAC Red Team Professional (GRTP)
3 Credit Hours
ISE 6370 develops Red Team operators capable of planning and executing consistent and repeatable engagements that are focused on training and on measuring the effectiveness of the people, processes, and technology used to defend environments. You will learn how to plan and execute end-to-end Red Teaming engagements that leverage adversary emulation, including the skills to organize a Red Team, consume threat intelligence to map against adversary tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs), emulate those TTPs, report and analyze the results of the Red Team engagement, and ultimately improve the overall security posture of the organization. As part of the course, you will perform an adversary emulation against a target organization modeled on an enterprise environment, including Active Directory, intelligence-rich emails, file servers, and endpoints running in Windows and Linux. Through this course, you will better understand and be able to show the value that Red Teaming and adversary emulations bring to an organization.
Security Leadership | Special Focus Area (Optional)
To pursue this Special Focus Area, complete the following two courses and any additional elective course listed above.
ISE 6001: Implementing and Auditing CIS Controls | SEC566 + GCCC
SANS Course: SEC566: Implementing and Auditing CIS Controls
Certification: GIAC Critical Controls Certification (GCCC)
3 Credit Hours
Cybersecurity attacks are increasing and evolving so rapidly that is more difficult than ever to prevent and defend against them. ISE 6001 will help you to ensure that your organization has an effective method in place to detect, thwart, and monitor external and internal threats to prevent security breaches. As threats evolve, an organization's security should too. Standards based implementation takes a prioritized, risk-based approach to security and shows you how standardized controls are the best way to block known attacks and mitigate damage from successful attacks.
ISE 6700: Building and Leading Security Operations Centers | LDR551 + GSOM
SANS Course: LDR551: Building and Leading Security Operations Centers
Certification: GIAC Security Operations Manager Certification (GSOM)
3 Credit Hours
Managing a security operations center (SOC) requires a unique combination of technical knowledge, management skills, and leadership ability. Whether you are looking to build a new SOC or take your current team to the next level, ISE 6700 provides the right balance of these elements to super-charge your people, tools, and processes. You will learn how to build a high-performing SOC tailored to your organization and the threats it faces. You will be given the tools needed to manage an effective defense, measure progress towards your goals, and build out more advanced processes like threat hunting, active defense, and continuous SOC assessment. Each section includes hands-on labs, introductions to some of the industry's best free and open-source tools, and an interactive game in which you will apply your new SOC management skills in real-world scenarios.