[SC-L] Where Does Secure Coding Belong In the Curriculum?

Brad Andrews andrews at rbacomm.com
Tue Aug 25 16:23:04 EDT 2009


I had proofs in junior high Geometry too, though I do not recall using  
them outside that class.  I went all the way through differential  
equations, matrix algebra and probability/statistics and I don't  
recall much focus on proofs.  This was in the early 1980s in a good  
school (Illinois), so it wasn't just modern teaching methods that were  
too blame.  I am not sure that the proofs were all that useful for  
understanding some things either, though the logic they taught has  
value that I missed a bit of since I did hit some modern techniques.

-- 

Brad Andrews
RBA Communications
CISM, CSSLP, SANS/GIAC GSEC, GCFW, GCIH, GPCI


Quoting Stephan Neuhaus <Stephan.Neuhaus at disi.unitn.it>:

>
> On Aug 25, 2009, at 17:35, Benjamin Tomhave wrote:
>
>> You don't teach proofs - not really. The elementary and junior high
>> curriculum generally does not contain anything about proofs
>
> I was talking about college students because that's when I was properly
> taught programming.  That may no longer be true.  But in maths, I *was*
> taught how to do proper proofs in high school (from 7th grade on, when
> we had Geometry). I may have been unusually lucky.



More information about the SC-L mailing list