Cyber Security Awareness Training, Page 500 Reviews

We ask our users to rate and review our course immediately after they've completed their training. Here's what people are saying...

USER REVIEWS

Average score 4.7

9835 reviews

  • 83% 5
  • 11% 4
  • 3% 3
  • 1% 2
  • 1% 1
Clear& concise with great examples shown

Very clear and concise training on a topic which is not always an engaging one for team members to sit through, coupled with some great examples of security breaches and simple measures we can take to protect our business.

5/5
Well presented, avoided jargon

No summary provided

5/5
Good

No summary provided

5/5
Good content

Very good content and quick to complete.

5/5
Clear and concise

No summary provided

5/5
Well structured and easy to navigate

Well structured and easy to navigate.

5/5
Not checking if people can spot fraud.

The course - as far as I know - appeared to give a good overview of cyber threats and methods used, which would give people a general idea of what to look out for; however it didn't do anything to challenge people's brains into spotting fraudulent messages from amongst genuine ones.It was a bit like a maths teacher telling students that you can use SOH-CAH-TOA to work out either the length of a side, or one of the internal angles of (and from that the remaining angle of), a right angle triangle - and then just leaving the subject at that, and not getting the students to actually DO it. Maths teachers normally, having introduced students to a subject and explained how it works, that get their students to DO the technique - in class - and then again for homework.With the Cyber Security course, more than with the other courses (as the course actually uses the medium being talked about: internet connected computers) there is the opportunity to challenge people into learning by doing.So, to get from one "slide" to the next, students could be offered a choice of three or more links to choose from to get to the next slide. All but one of those "links" should be subtly fake (remember the Arnason/Amason trap). So by the end of the course, the students would have hopefully had quite a bit of practice at using their brains to discriminate between real links/messages and fake or fraudulent ones.And, of course, you could tell them that you will deduct a mark for every wrong link chosen.Maybe that should be for a Mark 2 course?

4/5
Clear and helpful

No summary provided

5/5
Very important information

Very important information covered and the importance of the issues are well drilled home.

5/5
Covered everything you need to know

Very professional video, easy to follow and the presenter was good.

5/5

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