The University of Winchester has secured £364,000 over five years to expand its BSc Cyber Security programme, as part of an £80 million joint MoD/Department for Education initiative to grow the pipeline of graduates with defence-ready computing and engineering skills.
For defence supply chain organisations, the programme is designed with industry integration at its core. Winchester will recruit active defence industry professionals as Industry Teaching Fellows, practitioners who retain live employer networks and bring operational experience directly into programme delivery. Supply chain businesses looking to influence curriculum content or engage students early will find a formal route in.
A new Defence Cyber Schools Engagement Lead will build pathways from colleges through to a course aligned with the UK Cyber Security Body of Knowledge (CyBOK) and defence industry requirements – meaning graduates entering the supply chain will arrive with sector-relevant foundations rather than generic IT skills.
The university already has a track record here: existing degree apprenticeships delivered with technology partners have produced graduates embedded in defence-adjacent organisations and familiar with secure working environments.
Outreach activity, including a Sixth Form Cyber Challenge and residential programmes targeting underrepresented groups, aims to widen the talent pool feeding into the sector over the longer term.
Pro Vice Chancellor Matt Webster said the award reflects Winchester’s “deep regional ties to the defence sector” across Hampshire and Wiltshire, with employer engagement extending “beyond formal agreements into day-to-day programme delivery.”
For supply chain primes and SMEs facing persistent cyber skills shortages, this represents a direct opportunity to shape the next generation of hires from the ground up.
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