Teen Cybersleuths

Six middle school students whose school was destroyed in the deadly Paradise fires are among the hundreds of students who will be taking part in the third California Cyber Innovation Challenge, June 21-23.

This year’s challenge will present a medical cyber crime to students from 25 schools statewide. The students will sift through physical evidence and use their computer skills to attempt to solve the crime before time runs out.

“They have six hours for this challenge,” said Jess MacMillan, the Cal Poly liberal arts and engineering studies student who created the storyline. “Two hours to go through all the rooms and four hours to actually analyze all the evidence.”

This is the first time students from Achieve Charter School in Paradise, California, will take part in the event — less than a year after the Camp Fire destroyed more than 18,800 structures in Butte County last November, including the students’ homes and school.

“They are so excited about the competition,” said Jorge Rojas, the team’s coach and a middle school history teacher at Achieve Charter, which is now holding classes in portable trailers behind a church in Chico. “They already know that they really enjoy technology. Now they can understand that they can actually do a lot with it if they want to pursue it as a career.”

Twenty-nine high school and middle school teams from across the state will compete in two divisions at the CCIC, a California-focused, statewide cybersecurity championship competition that aims to deepen students’ interest in the growing field of cybersecurity.

“We are thrilled to have Achieve Charter join this year’s competition,” said Martin Minnich, program manager for Cal Poly’s California Cybersecurity Institute. “The Cal Poly community admires the students and the Town of Paradise’s resolve and spirit as they rebuild their lives after the devastating fire.”

Achieve Charter competed in a regional California Mayors Cyber Cup event in the spring, with the middle school team placing first. The win marked a turning point for the students, who had only just learned about the competition and started training.

“They were so happy. Being in that competition was a change in mindset for them,” Rojas said. “With everything they’ve gone through, for them to feel the actual essence of winning something, it made them feel hopeful that there is going to be a better future for them.”

At Cal Poly, the Achieve Charter students and students from middle and high schools across California will participate in a competition intended to highlight the challenges of securing health care information and medical devices. The competition embodies Cal Poly’s Learn by Doing motto, as students experience live-immersive environments representing real-world scenarios.

Jess MacMillan,a liberal arts and engineering studies major, created the storyline for this year’s challenge.

The students will use state-of-the-art forensics tools to extract and collect digital evidence to stop a health care-themed cyber plot. Using a combination of technical, analytical, and persuasive skills, each team will present their findings to a panel of expert judges representing leaders from industry, academia, government, and law enforcement.

“During the competition, students will interact with judges and ambassadors from a variety of industries,” Minnich said. “This gives them insight into future career possibilities and an opportunity to learn how Californians are protecting California.”

The CCIC is designed to raise up the next generation of cybersecurity professionals by increasing their cyber fluency, professional experience, and interest in digital forensics.

“In addition to training students on cyber forensics, we will provide hands-on learning opportunities for the next generation of cyber defenders,” California Cybersecurity Institute Director William J. “Bill” Britton said.

The following twenty-five schools, comprising twenty-nine teams, will compete in the CCIC:

• Achieve Charter School, Paradise

• Assurance Learning Academy, Lancaster (DoubleSimplex)

• Benjamin Franklin High School, Los Angeles (Voyager) • California High School, San Ramon (CyberSharks)

• Coast Union High School, Cambria (Coast1) • CORE Butte High School, Chico (HyperLynx2)

• Del Norte High School, San Diego (CyberAegis Aether, CyberAegis Chobani, CyberAegis Hyperion and CyberAegis Zelos)

• Gavilan High School, Gilroy

• Granada High School, Livermore (Purple Narwhals)

• Granada Hills Charter High School (Granada1) • Grand Terrace High School (CyberBois)

• James C Enochs High School, Modesto (DuBois) • Jesuit High School, Carmichael (R4808N)

• Martin Luther King High School, Riverside (MLKTeam1) • Mira Costa High School, Manhattan Beach (RAWSUGAR)

• Multiple schools from the Bay Area (CoderDojo) • North Hollywood High School (Mendenhall)

• Palos Verdes Peninsula High School, Rolling Hills Estates (PantherTeam1)

• Roseville High School (l am g/)

• Santa Lucia Middle School, Cambria (SLMS1)

• Scripps Ranch High School, San Diego (ByteSized Falcons)

• Toby Johnson Middle School, Elk Grove (Anime Club)

• Troy High School, Fullerton (BletchleyPark and TroyTechSupport)

• Turlock High School (Turlock NJROTC)

• Ukiah High School (MAJORCats)

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