I think if you look at the situation right now in Canada, probably about two-thirds of engineering schools have some form of either a co-op or one-time internship programs that in some cases are mandatory and in other cases are optional. I would say that in most schools, as in our school, co-op is an option. About one-third of our undergraduate students go through the co-op route in order to obtain their degree. We've been growing that program over the years, and we'll continue to grow that program.
It's always a matter of making sure you're balancing the number of students you have in the co-op stream with the capacity of the market to absorb those co-op students. The number of work placements available is not infinite, so you have to make sure. Often it's not necessarily distributed in the same way our student population is, so we have to make sure we adjust the number of co-op or internship positions that are available in each discipline to the reality of the job market.