Three tips for IT professionals for Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2024
Discover tips for establishing a simple, secure learning environment for your school.
Protect against outside threats with cybersecurity and technology management solutions, while maintaining privacy and maximizing learning time.
Discover tips for establishing a simple, secure learning environment for your school.
For Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2024 this October, join educators who are using Microsoft resources to enhance their knowledge and teach cybersecurity to their students.
Learn how unified solutions like Microsoft 365 Education can help schools around the world with security, productivity, and collaboration in the age of AI.
With a variety of AI solutions for educators, leaders, and IT staff, we can help you create efficiencies that give you more time to focus on what matters most: students.
Microsoft offers multifactor authentication (MFA) without a smartphone using secure, passwordless device access.
Microsoft Education prioritizes providing solutions and tools to help you be cybersafe. Learn five ways that you can prioritize cybersecurity to help keep your school and users safe.
AI is igniting enthusiasm in classrooms, department meetings, board rooms, and administrative offices across the country. For many, generative AI is changing what it means to create, solve problems, communicate, and even learn.
Technology has become an integral part of education, with students relying on various devices to access resources, collaborate with peers, and engage in learning activities. However, with the increased reliance on technology comes the heightened risk of cyber threats.
Each day, schools and universities face cyber threats from bad actors who want access to the sensitive data stored in education systems.
In 2023, Oregon State University (OSU) was at the forefront of innovation, securing more than $480 million in competitive research grants. However, the spring of 2021 brought a harsh realization: even the most prestigious institutions are not immune to cyber threats.
Technology was already firmly integrated with school systems before the COVID-19 pandemic. But since 2020, admin processes and classroom learning—whether traditional, hybrid, or fully remote—have pivoted, increasingly relying on technology-based solutions.
According to the U.S. Government Accountability Office, school staff were responsible for most of the accidental security breaches plaguing schools between 2016–2020, with students responsible for most of the intentional breaches (the bulk of incidents being to—perhaps unsurprisingly—change grades).