Sure, and I have another question. You may be able to add additional information through a follow-up to this one too.
When you talk about safety, I'm thinking that we also have very different settings. We have urban settings, which could be indigenous women who are living off reserve or are residents of an urban community. That may be one set of challenges. Then there could be female students in remote communities and the disparities that may be there. I would think perhaps there's safety in living in their own communities with their own families and being schooled with their neighbours and family members and things like that.
Then, as we've heard, people have to leave their communities to go for higher levels of education, even for high school. I've lived in many communities where students have come in from other communities. When we have young female students come in, I look at my daughters in high school. If they had to leave the safety of our home and community and go somewhere else, would that have an effect on those learning outcomes as well?
Again, I'd like any kinds of thoughts on not only the gender differences but those geographical differences and the kinds of settings where indigenous women may have to take their schooling. How do we mitigate against these things for safety in each of those kinds of categories?