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Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2025

The NCDPI K-12 Cybersecurity Program proudly welcomes North Carolina’s PSUs to Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2025! NCDPI, in alignment with Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and National Cybersecurity Alliance (NCA), will promote four key cybersecurity behaviors that provide the basis for the idea of Secure Our World and the Core 4:

If your PSU or company are hosting any Cybersecurity Awareness Month events, or you want to share an event you found out about, please email aelawre2@ncsu.edu or K12CyberSecTeam@dpi.nc.gov and we’ll get it added to our list!

Stay tuned for more information on a wide variety of 2025 events for your PSU to attend. Additional resources and information will be shared in the coming weeks.

The Core 4 Online Safety Tips

The Core 4 has been the central focus of Cybersecurity Awareness Month since 2023. The idea behind this group of tips is that these are the essential skills that every individual should possess & practice to stay safe online. Please look below for more information on those skills and how they can be applied through a K-12 lens.

Use Stronger Passwords and a Password Manager

Unique, long passwords are a first line of defense; long, random, one-of-a-kind passwords dramatically reduce the chance of a breach. A password manager handles the “remembering,” so you don’t reuse passwords across accounts. In schools, one weak or reused password can cascade into access to gradebooks/SIS, HR/payroll, transportation, vendor portals, etc. Making strong/unique passwords “standard practice” protects students, staff, and families district-wide.

What you Can Do

  • Make long passphrases (4–5 unrelated words) for important accounts.
  • Don’t reuse passwords—separate home and school.
  • Start using a password manager; save your top 5 logins today.
  • Run your manager’s “password health” check and replace weak/reused items

Example Scenarios

  • A reused personal password is exposed in a breach and unlocks a payroll portal; a unique passphrase in a manager would have stopped it.
  • An afterschool club’s “shared” password leaks and circulates around campus to non-club members; switch to individual accounts or a shared vault entry with limited access.

Turn on Multi-Factor Authentication

MFA adds a quick second check (Push Notification, passkey/security key, One-Time Password, yubi-key) so a stolen password alone can’t be used to log in to your account. It shuts down most account takeovers. In K-12, MFA is critical for email/SSO and especially for roles handling money or student data (finance, HR, registrars, front office, technology, etc). 

What you Can Do

  • Turn on MFA for your email and any other account that supports it.
  • Store backup codes securely (in your manager or printed and locked away).
  • If you’re subbing or traveling, confirm your default MFA method works on the go.

Example Scenarios

  • Someone tries to log in to your bank account using a stolen password, but your bank sends you an SMS one-time code to verify the login attempt. This tips you off to the compromise, and you’re able to alert your bank.

Update Your Software

Updates fix known security holes in operating systems, browsers, and apps; skipping them leaves doors open in your systems. In schools, keeping browsers, testing apps, device OSs, and classroom tools current prevents instruction disruptions and helps mitigate potential ransomware incidents. Think of updates as routine maintenance that keeps learning and business operations running.

What you Can Do

  • Restart devices weekly and accept updates when prompted.
  • Force a browser update to grab the latest security patches.
  • Update critical classroom/home apps (video tools, doc viewers, drivers).
  • At home, update phones, tablets, computers, and smart devices tied to school accounts.

Example Scenarios

  • A widespread browser 0-day exploit appears, and overnight auto-updates close the hole early that same morning. This prevents a potential PSU-wide service interruption.
  • An outdated testing app locks up during exams. If the application was updated beforehand, the PSU could have avoided the resulting downtime and need for retests.

Recognize and Report Scams

Phishing and social engineering attacks prey on urgency, curiosity, or fear to make people click, share info, or move money. Recognizing and reporting suspicious messages quickly helps defenders isolate threats and protect everyone. In schools, scammers typically target front offices, principals, coaches, parents, and vendors with lures like gift-card requests, fake “shared documents,” FAFSA/fee scams, and “please update bank info” emails.  

What you Can Do

  • Pause before you click; check the sender, hover links, and distrust surprise “urgent” requests.
  • Use your mail app’s Report button or forward suspicious messages to your PSU’s security address.
  • If you clicked or entered info, report it right away! Speed limits damage.
  • Verify money/data changes via a known phone number or in person, not just email.

Example Scenarios

  • A registrar gets a “state audit” request for student records; reporting it prevents a privacy incident where PII was potentially disclosed.
  • An athletics gift card email “from the principal” is flagged and blocked because staff report it promptly. This saves numerous PSU members from potentially sending their money to the bad actors.

Schedule of Events and Activities

Note: Most of these events will require registration or sign-up. We will continue to add events as they are announced. Please continue to check back for updates

Week 1: Sept 29th – Oct 3rd

Week 2: October 6th – 10th

Week 3: October 13th – 17th

Week 4: October 20th – 24th

Week 5: October 27th – 31st

KnowBe4 Cybersecurity Awareness Month Weekly Planner

For your convenience, we have extracted and directly linked the various Modstore pieces referenced in KnowBe4’s Weekly Planner for Cybersecurity Awareness Month. These are materials that can be sent out to your end users as part of your traditional training campaigns. Any materials not directly linked here can be found in the resource kit.

Please take the time to officially register for KnowBe4’s Cybersecurity Awareness Month Resource Kit to gain access to all Downloadable Assets and the Resource Kit Strategy Guide. The Strategy Guide is extremely helpful as it gives detailed guidance on how to leverage these assets for your own local Cybersecurity Awareness Month Campaign.

Week 1: General Cybersecurity

Week 2: AI Threats

Week 3: Ransomware

  • Interactive Module – Ransomware Ready
  • Video Module – Cloud Ransomware Demo
  • Downloadable Assets
    • Infographic – Major Keys to Ransomware Protection
    • Poster – Jaws: Don’t Be a Victim
    • Awareness Tips – Your Role

Week 4: Incident Reporting

Note: KnowBe4 has indicated that these materials will be free to access through October 31st. If you’re interested in accessing them after that time, or incorporating them into an actual training campaign, you can do so from within your KnowBe4 console.

Additional Resources

  • KnowBe4 Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2025 Resource Kit
    • This year, KnowBe4 has prepared a fleshed-out kit full of new content and recommendations to craft the perfect training and phishing campaigns during Cybersecurity Awareness Month. This kit includes campaign suggestions, a web-based planner, and posters, all with a focus on their Inside Man series!
  • National Cyber Alliance – Then & Now
    • The National Cyber Alliance has just released its new “Then & Now” workbook, which focuses on providing free tips, real-world examples, and helpful activities for older adults
  • CISA Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2025 Toolkit
    • CISA has released a comprehensive cybersecurity awareness toolkit that is built around the theme of “Building a Cyber Strong America”. This toolkit includes a cybersecurity awareness month guide, posters, infographics, presentations, tip sheets, and much more! These resources can be found when you click the above link and scroll down to the “Resource Materials” section.
  • National Cyber Alliance – Cybersecurity Awareness Month 2025 Guide
    • Follow the above link and register to become an NCA Cybersecurity Champion to receive their annual toolkit! This toolkit features animated videos, tip sheets, logos, customizable graphics, and a sample content calendar that specs out what your PSU’s Awareness Month Campaign can look like.
  • U.S. Department of EducationTop 10 Cybersecurity Tips for Teachers
    • This printable infographic provides simple tips for increasing cybersecurity readiness, cyber-awareness, and strategies to help teachers and school administrators recognize and defeat cyber threats and protect students’ and staff privacy.
  • Cyber.org – Practice CTF
    • This site contains sample challenges for the Intermediate and High School divisions, and is designed to introduce students to the Jeopardy-style CTF format.
  • Cyber.org – Events
    • This page contains a wide array of virtual webinars being held by the Cyber.org team. We’ve already included relevant Cybersecurity Awareness Month events above, but check out this page for other events focused on their different free courses, along with some more technical conversations.