That's the point I'm trying to make.
The other point concerns what the chair mentioned, that you could take shop, or when I was at school you could take woodworking or home economics. Then they took shop and that home ec program out of the schools in Nova Scotia totally. For at least 15 years, they were gone; however, now in the junior high schools, in the new schools that are being built, they are back. They give young men and women an opportunity to explore some of those areas.
Here is the other question I have. It didn't come up today, but one issue we've had a lot of discussion on, especially from the student groups, is the cost of student loans and the burden of them. Education comes with a price tag. One of the issues that really pushes the students in a major way is that working detracts from what you can get as your student loan.
I wonder whether we need to change direction here to put a greater incentive in place for students to work, and not take it back from their student loan.