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Last summer, a team of Cedarville engineering students traveled to Zimbabwe, applying their expertise to a two-year partnership aimed at improving water filtration to bring clean water and hope to the Karanda Mission Hospital.
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Cedarville University’s cyber operations program continues to earn national recognition for its educational excellence and high-level partnerships. Now, one of its leaders is helping to pioneer cyber operations education across the country.
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The National Centers of Academic Excellence in Cybersecurity, managed by the National Security Administration, provides a designation in Cyber Operations that is held by only 22 universities in the United States. Cedarville University, a private Christian university in Ohio, stands among the many prestigious institutions on that list.
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While you may not be able to judge a book by its cover, you can discern the quality of an academic program by the success of its graduates and partnerships with business leaders. At Cedarville University, having partnerships with the National Security Agency (NSA), Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and Intel indicate the success of its 30-year engineering program, which includes computer science and cybersecurity.
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Cedarville University’s cyber security degree program has been named the nation’s top program by Intelligent.com, reflecting its commitment to both technological excellence and Christian values.
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Cedarville University and the Air Force Materiel Command Engineering and Technical Management Directorate at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (WPAFB) have formalized their long-standing relationship through a new Education Partnership Agreement (EPA).
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A national shortage of engineers with experience in semiconductor development is motivating Intel to invest in college graduates during the next stages of their expansion. Future Cedarville University engineering graduates will benefit from investments into educational programs and proximity to a $20 billion Intel facility under construction within an hour of campus.
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A rare faith-based video game, “Mr. Mueller’s Grand Experiment,” was quietly released on June 21 on Steam, a video game digital distribution service. The game was created by international missionary Scott Tipton with the help of three Cedarville University computer science students.
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Space is the final frontier, but the path around the Earth is becoming an increasingly busy cosmic highway. With the number of satellites traveling around the Earth expected to increase by tens of thousands in the next decade, the work of scientists to properly locate these satellites is extremely important. That is the view of Dr. George Landon, professor of computer science at Cedarville University, who was recently named a fellow with the United States Air Force Summer Faculty Fellowship.
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From the land of Legos to the world of cutting-edge technology, Josh Thomas, a recent graduate of Cedarville University, has always possessed a keen interest in the art of building. This inherent trait led him to begin a career as a software engineer with Google.
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Nearly five years since its inception, Cedarville University’s civil engineering program has received accreditation by the ABET.
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In 2022, according to research studies by the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Texas, approximately 5 in 10 concussions were undiagnosed, due largely in part to the subjectivity of typical concussion tests.
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For the past 14 years, Cedarville University has enjoyed record student enrollments. Will this trend continue in the 2023-24 academic year?
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It’s no secret college students have full schedules with classes and homework, not to mention extracurriculars. But with the help of his new website app “Homework Muffin,” Joel Kendall has solved one ever-present college student concern: time management.
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One could say Annie Rourke and Jonathan Gregory do everything together. The pair of engineering students at Cedarville University plan to keep it that way with a wedding and mutual job designing missiles and rockets on the horizon.
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Cedarville University was awarded a grant by the National Security Agency (NSA) to host its first GenCyber cybersecurity camp this summer, June 26-30.
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For Nishant Nedungadi, working on classified government projects in a physics laboratory was not necessarily what he envisioned when he pursued a degree in computer science at Cedarville University.
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The numbers are in, and Cedarville University placement rates are showing impressive outcomes.
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Problem-solving is a skill college students learn in various settings. Now, Cedarville University School of Engineering and Computer Science is offering a campus-wide computer programming competition Saturday, March 25, to help showcase these skills.
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With the support of the Ohio Cyber Range Institute, Cedarville University is hosting The Ohio CyberEd Workshop, March 2-3 in the Stevens Student Center event rooms, beginning 6 p.m. on Thursday.