Absolutely.
I can say, I think as a starting point, our position is that we would not to restrict the definition, that the use of the simple term “education”, the broad and expansive use, is in line with the view of the Supreme Court that fair dealing is a fundamental users right and is in line with the fundamental values of Canadians. Regardless of the context of the education, whether it be formal education in a college or university classroom, or going to the examples given by my colleague--a church group, a YMCA swim class, wherever--they should have access to this exception.
I think this puts a fair dealing test on to what we consider the more important part, the fairness analysis. It says that as long as you're using the work for an educational purpose, regardless of the context, and as long as that is fair...you have access to this exception, in that it means it's there for every Canadian and not simply a privileged minority.