
Always patient and willing to help.
Douglas Sicker is a Professor Emeritus in the Department of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering at the University of Colorado Denver's College of Engineering, Design and Computing, where he currently serves as Vice Chancellor of Technology, Strategy, and Innovation and Chief Technology Officer. He joined the university in March 2020 as Senior Associate Dean for Computing Initiatives and Professor of Computer Science. In subsequent roles, he was appointed Chief Computing Officer and special advisor to the provost, leading a cross-campus task force on interdisciplinary computing, and later named the first Vice Chancellor for Technology Strategy and Innovation, overseeing campus-wide computing education efforts including "Computing Across the Curriculum," the Office of Information Technology, and IT infrastructure. Sicker previously held the Thomas Lord Endowed Chair Professorship in Computer Science and Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University, where he served as Head of the Department of Engineering and Public Policy and Interim Director of the CyLab Institute for Security and Privacy. His government service included positions as Chief Technology Officer for the Federal Communications Commission and the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the Department of Commerce, where he led initiatives on national broadband infrastructure and spectrum management. Earlier, he was Director of Global Architecture at Level 3 Communications and a professor of computer science at the University of Colorado Boulder, holding the Denver Business Challenge Endowed Chair and directing the Interdisciplinary Telecommunications Program.
Sicker earned his BS, MS, and PhD in Telecommunications from the University of Pittsburgh. His academic interests encompass network systems, including wireless systems, network security, and spectrum policy. He has published more than 400 papers and secured over $16 million in federal and industry research grants. At CU Denver, he has driven the development of new certificate and degree programs in data science and cybersecurity, transforming engineering education by integrating computing technology across the curriculum.
