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GEN9629 Mastering OWASP for Directors of Teaching and Learning

$199.00
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A tailored course, built for your situation

Mastering OWASP for Directors of Teaching and Learning

Build deeper command of web application security frameworks to lead digital learning safely

$199 one-time
24-hour access provisioning 30-day money-back guarantee Hand-built implementation playbook
12 modules. 12 chapters per module. 144 chapters total.
12 modules, each with 12 chapters (144 chapters total), text-based, plus downloadable templates and a hand-built implementation playbook delivered alongside course access.
Uncertainty when adopting new digital tools due to hidden security risks

The situation this course is for

Many academic leaders adopt platforms without full visibility into underlying web security standards, leading to reactive risk responses and delayed technology integration.

Who this is for

Senior educational leader overseeing teaching innovation and learning technology integration in private or faith-based academic institutions

Who this is not for

IT security auditors, software developers, or K, 12 classroom teachers without strategic technology oversight

What you walk away with

  • Map OWASP Top 10 risks directly to commonly used classroom platforms like LMS and student portals
  • Evaluate new digital tools with a structured security lens without relying on external IT teams
  • Lead cross-functional conversations with IT and curriculum teams using shared OWASP-based criteria
  • Document risk-aware technology adoption decisions with reference to OWASP control standards
  • Anticipate and prevent security concerns before pilot programs go district-wide

The 12 modules (with all 144 chapters)

Module 1. Introduction to OWASP in Education
Understand why OWASP matters in academic settings and how web application risks uniquely impact student data and learning continuity.
12 chapters in this module
  1. What OWASP is and why it applies to schools
  2. OWASP vs other security frameworks
  3. Real incidents in education institutions
  4. Why Directors of Teaching and Learning own this
  5. Linking OWASP to digital pedagogy
  6. Security as part of learning equity
  7. Common tools that fall under OWASP scope
  8. Faculty adoption patterns and risk
  9. Leadership misconceptions about safety
  10. How breaches start in small features
  11. Data types protected by OWASP
  12. First steps in assessment
Module 2. OWASP Top 10 for Academic Platforms
Break down each of the OWASP Top 10 risks with concrete examples from learning management systems and student-facing portals.
12 chapters in this module
  1. Injection in grading systems
  2. Broken authentication in LMS logins
  3. Sensitive data exposure in report cards
  4. XML External Entities in integrations
  5. Broken access control in parent portals
  6. Security misconfigurations in cloud apps
  7. Cross-site scripting in forums
  8. Insecure deserialization in apps
  9. Known component vulnerabilities
  10. Insufficient logging in school systems
  11. API abuse in edtech tools
  12. Zero-day risk in free classroom apps
Module 3. Mapping OWASP to School Technology
Connect OWASP controls to real platforms used in classrooms such as Canvas, Google Classroom, and Schoology.
12 chapters in this module
  1. Google Forms and XSS risks
  2. Canvas and data exposure
  3. Schoology API call limits
  4. Parent portal login flows
  5. Student data export risks
  6. Third-party plugin reviews
  7. Single sign-on security models
  8. Cloud storage permissions
  9. Mobile app vulnerabilities
  10. Gradebook access controls
  11. Assignment upload validation
  12. Video conferencing integrations
Module 4. Risk Evaluation Without Technical Background
Equip non-engineers to assess web security using OWASP checklists and vendor questionnaires.
12 chapters in this module
  1. How to read a security addendum
  2. Asking the right vendor questions
  3. Scoring vendor responses
  4. Red flags in terms of service
  5. Understanding penetration test summaries
  6. Reading SOC 2 reports for relevance
  7. Spotting outdated libraries
  8. Evaluating patch frequency claims
  9. Reviewing incident response plans
  10. Mapping features to OWASP items
  11. Prioritizing risks by student impact
  12. Building a minimum security bar
Module 5. Building an OWASP-Informed Adoption Process
Design a repeatable evaluation workflow for new digital tools using OWASP principles.
12 chapters in this module
  1. Stages of tool evaluation
  2. Pre-vetting checklists
  3. Faculty proposal guidelines
  4. Pilot program design
  5. Data handling agreements
  6. Consent and notice requirements
  7. Stakeholder communication plan
  8. Parent information templates
  9. Faculty training essentials
  10. Ongoing monitoring cadence
  11. Decommissioning legacy tools
  12. Documentation for audits
Module 6. Cross-Functional Leadership Using OWASP
Lead discussions with IT, curriculum, and finance teams using OWASP as a common language for risk.
12 chapters in this module
  1. Translating OWASP for IT teams
  2. Presenting risks to non-technical staff
  3. Budget impacts of security upgrades
  4. Procurement timeline adjustments
  5. Incident response coordination
  6. Legal team alignment
  7. Communicating with parents
  8. Crisis simulation planning
  9. Policy update cycles
  10. Training rollouts
  11. Incident reporting workflows
  12. Quarterly review structure
Module 7. OWASP and Student Data Privacy
Connect OWASP principles to FERPA, COPPA, and state-level student privacy laws.
12 chapters in this module
  1. Data minimization in forms
  2. Recording consent digitally
  3. Age verification in apps
  4. Parent access rights
  5. Directory information policies
  6. Exporting data securely
  7. Third-party data sharing
  8. Anonymization techniques
  9. Data retention rules
  10. Student rights to deletion
  11. Audit logs for access tracking
  12. Breach notification requirements
Module 8. Security Communication for Faculty
Train educators to recognize risks without overwhelming them with technical jargon.
12 chapters in this module
  1. Phishing simulation basics
  2. Password hygiene for teachers
  3. Recognizing suspicious links
  4. Safe file sharing practices
  5. Classroom app permissions
  6. Student device management
  7. Remote learning risks
  8. Video conferencing security
  9. Assignment phishing scams
  10. Social engineering awareness
  11. Reporting incidents simply
  12. Monthly security tips
Module 9. Developing Institutional Playbooks
Create living documents that institutionalize OWASP-aware decisions beyond individual leadership.
12 chapters in this module
  1. Template for tool evaluation
  2. Checklist for vendor onboarding
  3. Incident response flowchart
  4. Communication tree for breaches
  5. Annual review calendar
  6. Training schedule for staff
  7. Policy update workflow
  8. Documentation archive structure
  9. Cross-departmental roles
  10. Succession planning
  11. Version control for playbooks
  12. Feedback loop integration
Module 10. Measuring Security Maturity Over Time
Track progress in OWASP compliance across departments and academic years.
12 chapters in this module
  1. Defining baseline maturity
  2. Scoring tool inventories
  3. Risk heat maps annually
  4. Faculty survey design
  5. IT audit alignment
  6. Reporting to senior leadership
  7. Benchmarking against peer schools
  8. Improvement targets
  9. Public transparency balance
  10. Third-party verification options
  11. Progress dashboards
  12. Lessons from past incidents
Module 11. Future-Proofing Against Emerging Threats
Anticipate next-gen risks in AI-driven edtech, chatbots, and automated grading.
12 chapters in this module
  1. AI-generated content risks
  2. Automated grading bias
  3. Chatbot data collection
  4. Voice assistant in classrooms
  5. Deepfake awareness training
  6. Biometric data from cameras
  7. Smart devices in labs
  8. Cloud-based grading exposure
  9. API sprawl from integrations
  10. Open-source tool risks
  11. Generative AI terms review
  12. Monitoring model drift
Module 12. Sustaining a Culture of Security
Embed security awareness into hiring, onboarding, and academic planning cycles.
12 chapters in this module
  1. Onboarding for new staff
  2. Curriculum design inclusion
  3. Budget planning integration
  4. Leadership transition protocols
  5. Student digital citizenship
  6. Parent workshop content
  7. Security champions program
  8. Celebrating secure behavior
  9. Rewarding reporting
  10. Public recognition ideas
  11. Media response templates
  12. Long-term vision setting

How this maps to your situation

  • Onboarding new digital tools
  • Evaluating edtech vendors
  • Leading cross-functional teams
  • Building institutional resilience

Before vs. after

Before
Adopting digital tools with incomplete visibility into underlying web security risks
After
Confidently leading secure technology adoption using OWASP as a structured evaluation standard

What's included with your purchase

  • 12 modules with 12 chapters each (144 chapters total)
  • Downloadable templates and worked examples for every module
  • Hand-built implementation playbook delivered alongside course access
  • 30-day money-back guarantee

Delivery and format

  • Course and learning environment access provisioned within 24 hours of purchase
  • Hand-built implementation playbook delivered alongside course access

Format: Text-based modules and chapters in the Art of Service learning environment, plus downloadable templates and worked examples for every chapter, plus the hand-built implementation playbook delivered alongside course access.

Time investment: Approximately 3 hours per module; designed for busy leaders to complete over 6, 8 weeks at their own pace.

If nothing changes
Continuing without a structured security framework increases exposure to data incidents, erodes stakeholder trust, and delays innovation due to reactive risk management.

How this compares to the alternatives

Unlike generic cybersecurity courses aimed at engineers, this program is tailored specifically for educational leaders who need practical OWASP mastery without technical prerequisites.

Frequently asked

Do I need a technical background to benefit from this course?
No. This course is designed for non-engineers leading technology decisions in academic settings. All concepts are taught using plain-language examples and education-specific scenarios.
How is the course structured?
12 modules, each containing 12 chapters (144 chapters total).
Will this help me with compliance audits?
Yes. You'll learn how to document technology decisions using OWASP standards, which strengthens audit readiness and internal review processes.
$199 one-time. Approximately 3 hours per module; designed for busy leaders to complete over 6, 8 weeks at their own pace..

Within 24 hours your account in the learning environment is provisioned and the tailored implementation playbook is delivered alongside it.

30-day money-back guarantee· 144 chapters· Hand-built playbook included· Account access within 24 hours