Absolutely. Not only do they not necessarily understand, but they are, on occasion, getting bad advice too, from people who say, “If you're not planning on bringing them now, don't worry. Leave them off. You can deal with them later”. We hear stories like that all the time.
The other thing is—and this is going back to Ms. Kwan's question around definition of “family”—that we will see cases where people will indicate that they have children. For immigration purposes, that means your biological children or your legally adopted children. When we have a case of a child who is a de facto adopted child and he or she has been indicated on the forms as a child, that seemed to be an untruth. I have yet to run across a client who did that intentionally. It's that, in their view, in their eyes, this is their child. They don't know that when you write “child” on an immigration form, that means technically your biological child or legally adopted child. And so there are real problems around that.