I'm very pleased to do that.
We have incredible demand in the Ontario system. In fact, we had a 31% increase in the number of first-year applicants. We were the most popular school in terms of first choice.
Now, that makes up about 3,600 or 3,700 individual undergraduate students, with a full-time equivalent of 3,200 and a growing corps of graduate students. But that's small. That's a very important growth piece for us.
We cover all disciplines in design, so everything from industrial design to environmental design—in the discussion on sustainability, we're partners in the mayor's initiative, for example—right through to material art and design. We have a very strong digital futures initiative across all disciplines, and an equal number of students in art.
The professions that we graduate students into include everything from the feature film industry to animation to working with hospitals. In fact, some of our colleagues are precisely involved in design in medical engineering. We have a pretty significant research portfolio of some of the supports from the granting agencies that my colleague mentioned, but also a great deal of collaboration with industry--but not on the college model, because industry tells us that they need students who have the intellectual and critical skills to lead businesses as well as the technical and creative skills.
We have a very holistic way of educating, but we're very engaged also with commercialization of research results.