The whole allophone population is most open to learning a second language. When we say that French immersion programs are booming in British Columbia, most of the students enrolled in those classes are of Asian background because the parents value multiple-language learning. They've come to Canada with the concept that they want to learn both official languages, and they enrol their children in immersion programs right away. They're learning English in the community, etc.
The other interesting little comment is that the Alliance Française is saying that it's mostly allophone students who are taking classes across the country. That's what it's really seeing in their population.
There are two things here that are positive. We will have a more diverse population in Canada in the future, so I think they will embrace bilingualism more and more as we go forward. We may not meet our target of 2013--we're not anywhere close--but more and more young people see the goals of learning two languages, three languages, four languages, and that pluri-lingualism is the way of the future for Canada. So it encourages French as well.