They're all dropouts, right?
Are we trying to fit a square peg into a round hole? What I mean by that is that there used to be a time when you would go to university/college, you'd graduate, you'd go to work for a corporation, and you'd spend your entire life there. The transition from education to the workforce was seamless. Rather than looking at the educational system and how we are educating our young people, should we be looking at that process of transition, as opposed to the process of educating our young people? That is question number one, and I'll direct this in a second.
Has education now become a lifelong process, which can't necessarily be found in an institution as such, given that some of the most successful people we hear about today are dropouts? Everybody now has an opportunity to succeed without necessarily having to go the traditional route of being educated in a traditional way. Would someone like to take a stab at that? Just give me your initial thoughts, and then I'm going to move on.
Mr. Lewchuk.