“I feel that if there isn’t anyone that volunteers, we will always be at a standstill,” said Karpinski. “Volunteers give back out of their hearts to help others. If they’re passionate about it, they’re going to get a reward, even if it’s just internal.”
Karpinski finds that reward when she shares insight from her career experiences with her students. She encourages other alumni to come back to share their stories with students as mentors or guest speakers.
“The students can see first-hand how they’ll use the knowledge they’re gaining at Penn State in the real world,” she said.
Karpinski first became interested in SRA after 9/11. Following that tragic day, Karpinski knew she wanted to protect the nation — and one way she could do that was by protecting computers and information.
“Penn State was only one of the colleges in the country that had an SRA program,” she said. “[At the time] there were only five colleges in the country that had a cyber program up and running. Penn State was close to home and was one of the best research universities. I wanted to be close to that.”
During her time as a student, Karpinski conducted security research and completed an internship with Atos, where she then was hired as a technical writer after graduation. Now, as a solution architect, she says that on one side she manages the firm’s proposals, and on the other side she writes them. And, she draws on the foundation she built in IST.