This is for whoever can answer the question.
When we're looking at experiential learning, there's the employment issue. If you take monthly averages over the past three or four months, we have roughly a 12% unemployment rate among youth. The United States has 8%; Japan has 4%; the U.K. has about 12%, even though they're going through Brexit. When you apply that to experiential learning, the second item, which we don't really have a lot of data on, is underemployment.
If you apply experiential learning to that subject, do you have any data showing that if you go through a co-op, yes, you're going to earn a little bit more, but you're also going to end up in the field that you actually studied in?