I'd like to respond to that one, because we get that question a lot.
One of the big issues for us is that there's a declining population of children. A much greater portion of our population is the working-age population. Even if we could make every child perfectly literate when they graduate at 18, we would still have the bulk of our population struggling with literacy issues.
As we see the child population decline, what we're going to see is a growing immigrant population and the increased skill levels required of people who perhaps even had their grade 12 but have since lost skills.
I was speaking recently with someone who is in charge of the Peel literacy connection. They surveyed 50 people who had come through their programs, and 37 of those people had their grade 12, but because they had been in jobs that didn't require those literacy skills, they were coming back into programs to say they didn't have the writing skills or didn't have the grammar. One man wrote in saying that he had to do a lot of e-mail at work and didn't really have the skills. He had been told that his writing was just not good enough, and he asked for our help.
If we could just snap our fingers and fix the K to 12 system, if it needs fixing, that wouldn't address the issue that's out there right now for people.