Everything the CCRW embodies is part of the skills development agenda. The nine essential skills, as identified by the Government of Canada, are the nine essential skills that are built into all of our training programs for persons with disabilities. We have a very aggressive case management program, whereby if you are a person with a disability and you come into our program, we do what is called an intake. As part of that intake process we get to understand what your requirements are so that we can then place you as part of a continuum, so that you're not working in isolation, you're not doing training in isolation, you are part of a bigger picture. So it's about a case management plan whereby it's your plan as to what you want to do as part of your vocational development. We refer to this as an individualized vocational plan.
As part of this vocational plan, it could be that computer skills may be the piece set lacking for you because you want to be a computer technician. You can't be a computer technician if you don't have computer skills.
Literacy as part of the bigger picture is one component of many of the pieces in terms of people with disabilities.