First, with regard to the students, we face the following challenge: we don't have a choice or a selection of programs. Essentially, our students are in education. They complete a professional program with close ties to the school community. The program has a good reputation in western Canada for attracting students from throughout the western provinces. So this is a professional program.
However, because French is not the mother tongue of the majority of our students and because we have seen an increase in enrolment in immersion programs, we are not able to meet the needs of these students. Parents and students come to see us, but we don't have enough programs to meet the needs.
Also, we are trying to create programs that meet both the needs of students and their parents and the needs of the francophone community. We have identified two types of more general programs: a francophone studies program—which is more classical and provided within the university, offered along with partners, particularly Quebec—and a community development studies program that we are currently implementing and that meets these needs.
Because the population is scattered, and we talked about this earlier, we have been forced to innovate. We are not different. We have been forced to innovate from within. All the bridges we build, all the work and the research that we have implemented with various partners from coast to coast contribute to community development. Each researcher who works within the French institute, whether from Moncton, Ottawa or British Columbia, must conduct research that establishes a comparative basis with one of the realities facing our francophonie.