
Chair of NOVA’s Cybersecurity program, Professor Kwabena Konadu, affectionately known as Professor KK, was highlighted by the Virginia Community College System yesterday as the first VCCS faculty member in their ‘Take Five’ series. The objective for the series is to shine a light on those who are innovating while educating and, in the process, taking classroom instruction and student engagement to a whole new level through answering five questions.
The Q&A done by Craig Butterworth chronicles Konadu’s background, his connection with students, his successes, methodology of teaching, hobbies, and how the adjustment to remote learning is going.
Konadu who immigrated to the U.S. from Ghana at the age of 14 initially did not consider becoming a professor. He actually had dreams of becoming a professional soccer player.
Konadu started his career as a Systems Engineer at a variety of different companies and inserts industry experience into his teaching methods. He is CISSP, CASP, CEI, CEH certified, and holds a Master of Science and Bachelor of Science from George Mason University in Telecommunication Networks. He also has a degree in Physics from Washington College. Additionally, he was a part of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and inducted into the National Society of Black Engineers during his years of studies. Before joining NOVA, Konadu was an adjunct professor at George Washington University. His 20 years of professional experience is a great advantage to educating students in ‘real-world’ activities.
In the inception of teaching as an adjunct at NOVA, Konadu was still working in the private sector. Once his students approached him several times to consider full-time teaching so they could take more classes with him, he could not resist his “burning desire to work with students”. He made the switch because teaching was his calling, and not his profession. Konadu now teaches a variety of courses in Information Technology, Cybersecurity, Computer Forensics, and Cloud Computing at NOVA’s Woodbridge Campus.
In highlighting the challenges his current students face with remote learning, in the VCCS interview, he expressed how he found cloud solutions to help students who did not have a reliable computer or internet connection. He was able to use cloud resources to help resolve their problems (thanks to Amazon and VA cyber range). He took advantage of technology to provide visual and practical learning experiences.
Here is the link to read the full article on VCCS’ website: https://www.vccs.edu/blog/take-five-with-kwabena-konadu-professor-of-computer-science-at-nvcc/
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Northern Virginia Community College (NOVA) is the largest public institution of higher learning in the Commonwealth of Virginia and one of America's largest community colleges. NOVA enrolls nearly 80,000 students at its six campuses in Alexandria, Annandale, Loudoun, Manassas, Springfield (Medical Education Campus) and Woodbridge, through NOVA Online and high school dual enrollment. We offer more than 100 associate degree and certificate programs to help our students reach their academic and professional goals through university transfers and access to the most in-demand careers. At NOVA, we strive to ensure that every student succeeds, every program achieves and every community prospers. For more information about NOVA and its programs or services, visit our website, www.nvcc.edu, or call 703.323.3000.