We've seen the gap actually close in a lot of countries in Africa, in a lot of the places in which we work, and particularly close at a primary level. In some respects, in a place like Kenya, girls are actually better off than boys in many of the districts of the country. That gap is starting to close also at a secondary level. Where it's not closing are in those particularly fragile places, like the remote parts of Kenya or Sierra Leone, the remote parts of northern Uganda or South Sudan, or among protracted refugee situations.
I think there is an intuition there about where to focus our energy and resources, because those are the people who are particularly vulnerable.
Girls, in general, are doing better in education across the continent, except in a number of really significant pockets where we need to attend our attention.