Digital Forensics Minor
The Digital Forensics Minor is a faculty-directed minor (see the URI Catalog "Minor Fields Of Study" ) directed by Dr. Fay-Wolfe of URI's Computer Science Department. A minor is a credential (showing on your degree and transcripts) that a student earns along with a major. The Digital Forensics Minor can be done with any major.For the Digital Forensics Minor, the student must:
- See Dr. Fay-Wolfe to discuss the program as soon as possible.
- Typically we get students involved early (sophomore year) in digital forensics work in our Digital Forensics Center projects.
- Get approval from Professor Fay-Wolfe before the start of the student’s second-to-last semester. Note that approval is not guaranteed.
- Get approval from the Dean of the student’s college before the start of the student’s last semester.
- Earn at least half of the minor credits at URI
- No course required by the student's major may be counted towards a minor. For instance, since CSC485 is required by the minor (see below), it cannot be counted as a Computer Science major course. Note that this requirement is only for major courses, it does not apply to General Education requirements.
- Achieve a GPA of at least 2.0 in the minor courses
- (10 credits) Approved courses related to law, criminalistics,
criminal behavior, and statistics.
- At least one approved course in criminalistics or law
- At least one approved course in statistics
- At least one approved course in crime or law related psych/soc
- (4 credits) CSC 485 Computer Forensics ( recent course web site )
- (4 credits) CSC 486 Network Forensics ( recent course web site )
- CSC412 Operating Systems and Networks (pre-req to CSC485)
- CSC499 Internship done in digital forensics (one semester or summer). Internships are an essential part of this program; they are explained here.