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College playing key role in national intelligence effort

October 15, 2009

Penn State Harrisburg is a key partner in a federally funded University initiative aimed at encouraging Pennsylvania school students to consider college majors which lead to careers in the U.S. intelligence community.

The two-year, $1 million grant from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) involves Penn State Harrisburg, the University’s College of Information Sciences and Technology (IST), and the Penn State Office of Military and Security Programs.

The grant comes as a result of the College of IST being recently designated an Intelligence Community Center of Academic Excellence by the ODNI. Penn State Harrisburg was tapped to play a key role in the program, drawing on its academic and research strengths in areas related to security.

The college is home to majors in IST and Security and Risk Analysis and the University’s online certificate program in Homeland Security and Defense. Its School of Public Affairs features resident and adjunct faculty who have extensive experience in security, intelligence, antiterrorism, and law enforcement issues. The School of Business Administration features faculty who are nationally recognized for their logistics and transportation security expertise and the School of Science, Engineering, and Technology features engineering faculty who focus on a variety of topics including creating safer bridges and buildings and clean air and water.

“We are fortunate to have the depth of faculty and adjuncts who have intelligence and homeland security expertise,” says Director of the School of Public Affairs Steven A. Peterson. “They will most definitely strengthen the intelligence program.”

The award proposal was prepared by Dean of the College of IST Henry C. Foley, Lt. Col. Ron Madrid, director of Penn State’s Office of Military and Security Programs, and Peterson.
Peterson relates that Penn State Harrisburg’s role in the initiative will include:

 “This project exemplifies the partnerships that the College of IST is forming both inside and outside Penn State,” Foley adds. “The award will help us further our research and teaching goals at both the graduate and undergraduate levels.”

Madrid is confident the program will provide intelligence agencies with qualified Penn State students. “Intelligence services need to recruit and retain the best and brightest employees – those with diverse ethnic, cultural, and professional backgrounds, as well as regional, geographical, industry, language, and technical expertise – to protect our citizens and lead this country in the 21st century,” he said.

In 2008, the College of IST was designated a national Center of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance Education and Research by the U.S. National Security Agency and the Department of Homeland Security.

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