Přehled o publikaci
2020
What Are Cybersecurity Education Papers About? A Systematic Literature Review of SIGCSE and ITiCSE Conferences
ŠVÁBENSKÝ, Valdemar; Jan VYKOPAL and Pavel ČELEDABasic information
Original name
What Are Cybersecurity Education Papers About? A Systematic Literature Review of SIGCSE and ITiCSE Conferences
Authors
ŠVÁBENSKÝ, Valdemar; Jan VYKOPAL and Pavel ČELEDA
Edition
New York, NY, USA, Proceedings of the 51st ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education (SIGCSE '20), p. 2-8, 7 pp. 2020
Publisher
ACM
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Proceedings paper
Country of publisher
United States of America
Confidentiality degree
is not subject to a state or trade secret
Publication form
electronic version available online
Marked to be transferred to RIV
Yes
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14610/20:00115110
Organization
Ústav výpočetní techniky – Repository – Repository
ISBN
978-1-4503-6793-6
UT WoS
EID Scopus
Keywords in English
cybersecurity education; systematic literature review; systematic mapping study; survey; SIGCSE community; ITiCSE community
Links
EF16_019/0000822, research and development project. MUNI/A/1076/2019, interní kód Repo. MUNI/A/1411/2019, interní kód Repo.
Changed: 15/5/2024 03:40, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík
Abstract
In the original language
Cybersecurity is now more important than ever, and so is education in this field. However, the cybersecurity domain encompasses an extensive set of concepts, which can be taught in different ways and contexts. To understand the state of the art of cybersecurity education and related research, we examine papers from the ACM SIGCSE Technical Symposium and ACM ITiCSE conferences. From 2010 to 2019, a total of 1,748 papers were published at these conferences, and 71 of them focus on cybersecurity education. The papers discuss courses, tools, exercises, and teaching approaches. For each paper, we map the covered topics, teaching context, evaluation methods, impact, and the community of authors. We discovered that the technical topic areas are evenly covered (the most prominent being secure programming, network security, and offensive security), and human aspects, such as privacy and social engineering, are present as well. The interventions described in SIGCSE and ITiCSE papers predominantly focus on tertiary education in the USA. The subsequent evaluation mostly consists of collecting students' subjective perceptions via questionnaires. However, less than a third of the papers provide supplementary materials for other educators, and none of the authors published their dataset. Our results are relevant for instructors, researchers, and anyone new in the field of cybersecurity education, since they provide orientation in the area, a synthesis of trends, and implications for further research. The information we collected and synthesized from individual papers are organized in a publicly available dataset.