I would only add that this is an important issue and I think that part of it is making high school relevant to everybody. A large chunk of students graduate from high school with great marks and great literacy and lots of science and math and so forth, but a considerable number of kids are struggling. Some of them may be lower-income students, but lots of them are not and simply don't want to be in high school, so how do we make high school more relevant to them? I think there's a real awareness in school boards' understanding that they really have to serve them too. They're not there only to serve the ones who are getting As, but to serve all kids.
Part of what we've been doing is to make high school more relevant to kids and therefore more relevant to their employability.