FISSEA Forums are designed to provide opportunities for policy and programmatic updates, the exchange of best practices, and discussion and engagement among members of the Federal Information Security Educators (FISSEA) community.
The theme for the 2026 FISSEA Forums, Increasing Cybersecurity Awareness: The Human Firewall, highlights that human behavior is key to developing cybersecurity awareness and training programs. The theme focuses on humans at the center of education and training, including how humans can leverage emerging technologies to strengthen their efforts.
Are you interested in being a virtual exhibitor at the Forum? Reach out to us at %20fissea [at] nist.gov (fissea[at]nist[dot]gov) no later than May 1, 2026.
1:00-1:05pm ET
Welcoming Remarks
Latha Reddy, FISSEA Co-chair
Danielle Santos, Deputy Director of NICE, National Institute of Standards and Technology, U.S. Department of Commerce
1:05-1:30pm ET
Trust as an Attack Surface: Human Risk in Black-Box AI Systems
Bandana Kaur, Cybersecurity Researcher, HackWitHer
As AI tools are increasingly integrated into government workflows, human roles are shifting in subtle but important ways. This session explores how the “black box” nature of many AI systems affects human security behavior, creating blind spots that traditional awareness and training programs do not address. Rather than focusing on technical model internals, the discussion examines how over-trust, reduced scrutiny, and automation bias can weaken the human firewall in AI-assisted decision-making. Participants will gain practical insights into why AI-related security risks often emerge through normal, well-intentioned human use and how awareness programs can evolve to mitigate them.
1:30-1:45pm ET
Legacy of Leadership: A Fireside Chat with Dr. Loyce Pailen
Facilitated by Latha Reddy, FISSEA Co-chair
Join us for a conversation with Dr. Loyce Pailen as we discuss the journey of transforming the cybersecurity landscape through education, advocacy, and community mentorship. Drawing on her decades of leadership with FISSEA, Dr. Pailen will share insights on building impactful educational programs and the importance of cultivating cyber and AI awareness across every generation—from the classroom to the front lines.
Dr. Pailen is the Sr. Director, Center for Security Studies at the University of Maryland Global Campus. She has participated on the FISSEA Planning Committee for over twenty years and was recognized as the FISSEA Innovator of the Year in 2021.
1:45-1:55pm ET
FISSEA Ignite! Beyond the Deepfake - A Behavioral Framework for Federal AI-Awareness Training
Dr. Philip Chan, Collegiate Professor (T&L), School of Cybersecurity and IT, University of Maryland Global Campus
In 2026, the federal workforce faces a paradigm shift in cybersecurity: the democratization of high-fidelity synthetic media. Traditional "red flags" for phishing like poor grammar and suspicious URLs which have been rendered obsolete by Generative AI. To protect the agency mission, we must move beyond static awareness and toward a behavioral verification framework. This session will present an Innovative Solution implemented to transition federal employees from passive observers to active skeptics. Rather than focusing solely on "detecting" AI (which is becoming increasingly difficult for the human eye or ear), our program focuses on Protocol-Based Defense. This session will provide attendees with a blueprint for updating their own agency training curricula to address the velocity of AI-driven threats, ensuring federal security educators stay ahead of the adversary.
1:55-2:05pm ET
Break & Birds of a Feather Topic Discussions
NEW! At the FISSEA Spring Forum we will pilot Birds of a Feather-style breakout rooms to host open discussions on focused topics.
2:05-2:30pm ET
Recognition of FISSEA Contest Winners and the FISSEA Innovator of the Year
Presented by Craig Holcomb, FISSEA Contest and Innovator of the Year Lead
2:30-2:55pm ET
Reducing Risk Through Awareness and Training
Dr. Mack Jackson Jr., Cybersecurity Speaker / Educator, Vanderson Cyber Group
Cyber risks continue to rise, but most breaches still begin with human error. This presentation shows how organizations can significantly reduce cyber risk by building a strong culture of cybersecurity awareness. Attendees will learn how today’s attackers exploit trust, routine, and technology gaps, and how targeted training can prevent costly incidents. The session delivers practical strategies to strengthen employee behavior, improve decision-making, and reduce exposure to phishing, ransomware, data loss, and fraud. Participants will leave with clear, actionable steps to protect their organization, customers, and reputation in today’s evolving digital threat landscape.
2:55-3:00pm ET
Closing Remarks
Joyce Mui, FISSEA Co-Chair, Senior Manager Research Informatics, University of Maryland Medical System & University of Maryland Institute for Health Computing
3:00-3:30pm ET
Virtual Exhibit Hall
NEW! At the FISSEA Spring Forum we will pilot a virtual exhibit hall. Stick around after the event to meet with exhibitors in a group setting. Interested in hosting a booth? Reach out to us at %20fissea [at] nist.gov (fissea[at]nist[dot]gov).