The Department of Defense Cyber Institute

Students sitting in cyber class behind computers.

The Department of Defense Cyber Institute at Norwich University

Known as the DoD Senior Military College (SMC) Cyber Institute, the pilot program formally launched in October 2020 with a $10 million grant from the Department of Defense. 

Subsequently, Norwich was awarded a second $18.5 million, two-year grant in October 2021, a third $24 million two-year grant in October 2022, and a fourth $15.9 million two-year grant in September 2025.

Norwich University is the lead institution in a consortium of six senior military colleges designed to grow the nation’s pipeline of cybersecurity talent, filling crucial work roles in the Department of Defense. The program stakeholders include the Department of Defense Chief Information Office, National Security Agency, and U.S. Cyber Command. Since October 2020, 1,396 civilian and military students have participated in the SMC Cyber Institute cohorts.

“The SMC Cyber Leader Development Programs provide military and civilian students with funded DoD-focused cyber and artificial Intelligence (AI) experiential and immersive opportunities to include internships, research projects, competitions, and certifications to prepare for cyber work roles,” says NU Vice President of Strategic Partnerships Col. Sharon Hamilton, Ph.D., U.S. Army (Ret.). Dr. Hamilton serves as the SMC Cyber Institute grant Executive Program Director/Principal Investigator for the SMC program.

Mission

Enhance cyber and AI skills and competencies to expand the national cybersecurity talent pipeline to meet the high demand for DoD cyber and AI professionals. Support undergraduate cyber-related majors with real-world experiential learning and professional development opportunities. Outreach extends to middle and high school teachers and students in underserved and rural communities.

Funding

The four grant awards are shared among the nation’s six senior military colleges: Norwich, Virginia Tech, Virginia Military Institute, The Citadel, University of North Georgia, and Texas A&M. The grant funds support academic year 2021-2027 programming.

In October 2020, each SMC developed a DoD Cyber Institute. The Norwich campus programs are offered through the NU DoD Cyber Institute, based in the Senator Patrick Leahy School of Cybersecurity and Advanced Computing. “We’re at a very critical juncture in cyber at Norwich because the [national] need is great at the same point in history when our programs are expanding to meet that need,” Norwich Cyber Institute Director and Professor Dr. Michael Battig says.

Experiential Learning

Classroom learning provides the foundation. The SMC Cyber Institute program is built upon the Cyber Leadership Development Program (CLDP) framework, with emphasis on the whole student. The CLDP provides civilian and military students with a holistic, engaging, experiential, competency-building focus, and incorporates principles of cyber and AI academics, critical thinking, problem-solving, analytic thinking, leadership, teamwork, and written and oral communication. Students engage in rigorous curricular and extracurricular experiential and immersive learning activities.

Cyber Leader Development Program (CLDP) Requirements

Cyber Leader Development Program CDLP Dogtag puzzle graphic

■■ Cyber-related major/minor - Computer Science, Information Systems, Cybersecurity, Cyber Operations, Digital Forensics, Engineering, Data Science, AI, Software/Computer Engineering, Cyber Intelligence, Information Warfare, Math, Systems Development, Physics, OT, Cyber-Geospatial Analysis, EMS/EW, Critical Language (Chinese, Russian, Korean, Arabic)

■■ Cyber/AI-related DoD internship(4-10 weeks)

■■ Cyber/AI-related club/study group

■■ Cyber/AI-related training event, competition, outreach, certification, and conference

■■ Cyber/AI-related DoD research project or capstone

■■ Leadership position/experience

The six elements of the CLDP provide civilian and military students with solid academic education, cyber/AI-focused experiential opportunities, team-building environments for study and competitions, networking and communication experience at conferences, industry certifications to assess competency, and leadership experience to succeed in their careers. The CLDP specifically aims to enhance and fund student participation in cyber-related internships, competitions, conferences, student clubs and study groups, research projects, and capstone projects.

Faculty Support

The Senator Patrick Leahy School of Cybersecurity and Advanced Computing is home to the fastest-growing majors on campus. Grant dollars support cybersecurity faculty research, professional development, and certifications. In addition, the Norwich Cyber Institute grant supports Norwich faculty and staff in Engineering, AI, Information Warfare, and Chinese language academic programs. Cyber faculty from the six senior military colleges support joint Cyber Institute events and research.

Future Plans

The DoD SMC Cyber Institute Cyber Leadership Development Program at NU and its five SMC partners serve as models to be shared more broadly. The goal of this six-year pilot program is to gain DoD designation as a program of record to export the model to other colleges and universities designated as National Centers of Academic Excellence in Cybersecurity (NCAE-C).

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