I can respond to that in part. A lot of my work is with the research granting councils: the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. We always endeavour to respect federal jurisdiction, of course, so our mandate really and truly is to focus on the research. So the students that our programs in these areas are targeting really have to be graduates—master's degrees and Ph.D.s.
But to respond to your question, there are a number of internship programs that really serve a dual purpose. The first purpose is to actually demonstrate to industry the value of highly qualified people, whether they're at the master's, the Ph.D., or even the post-doctorate level in some cases. But also, it's to encourage students, to demonstrate that there is an alternative to an academic lifestyle. Often we find that people in the university stream would like to stay in that area, and we're just trying, through these programs, to demonstrate that there are opportunities.