Perhaps I will just add to that.
With respect to those institutions that in fact partner with educational consultants or agents, I think it's important to note that, first of all, not all institutions partner directly. Some institutions do not have partnerships. In fact, students individually take those initiatives in working with educational consultants.
As Global Affairs is marketing Canada and branding the value proposition, we have an opportunity to do more to educate our prospective students about who they are able to rely on in seeking that support in that initial part of the process. There's more we can do to inform and empower those students because that is not information that is proactively shared. There's more we can do to raise that profile and awareness.
The other part of this is that a significant number of recruitment and educational consultants who work with our institutions behave very ethically and do strive to support students in very meaningful ways. I think it's important for us to see there's a very significant number who fall into that category.
As I mentioned during my opening remarks, those are the trust partners with whom.... I know CBIE is working with individual provincial governments and some regional international education associations to further build their capacity. You have agents who are behaving ethically, but may not have a full and well-rounded grounding in how immigration processes related to study permit applications function and how best to support students. There's capacity we can build to help mitigate some of those risks.
Not all of them are behaving nefariously, but with further capacity building, they can be an even stronger ethical partner in working with our institutions to shore up some of these opportunities for our students.