The majority would be in Canada.
At the event that we had in New Brunswick last week, we had 11 countries attend. We have members in every province and territory, because prior learning assessment has been in Canada for well over 30 years, but in the absence of any dedicated funding or strategy that identifies the needs of adults, we are very much in the innovative stages, and it's not for lack of trying.
We haven't raised the awareness of prior earning assessment tools in the most effective ways possible. So it's really practitioners who are moving this forward.
There are some notable exceptions. The provinces of Quebec, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan have been real leaders in the area of prior learning assessment. Just recently, the Province of Alberta has had province-wide consultations on prior learning assessment and recognition. So it's becoming more in the public domain than it was before. Our concern, of course, is that there be a national strategy, national guidelines and standards for prior learning assessment. It needs to be rigorous.
The sector council movement is very interested in prior learning assessment. As you know, it is creating industry standards but needs the capacity for people who are experienced in the field to benchmark against those standards. Hence, the tools are required.