On post-secondary education for first nations, all that I've read has said that if first nations students get to the point where they enter into post-secondary education, the success rate is quite high, but it's getting them to that point.
In your situation it's trying to get the intervention, and to make the communities aware of opportunities even before they make that decision as to whether they are going to pursue education or drop out, or whatever their decision might be.
Could you expand a little bit on the aboriginal youth camps you mentioned? How long have they been going? What do they look like? The intent is obviously to make people within those communities aware of careers and opportunities within those communities. What kinds of successes are coming out of those?