First of all, thank you for your question and your comments, which I appreciate. I am prefacing that because I think my answer won't be entirely satisfactory to you.
As Mr. Jedwab mentioned earlier, one of the challenges is that education is a provincial jurisdiction, so that means 10 different areas as well as the territories to deal with. Only four of 10 provinces currently teach history as a mandatory subject, and trying to improve that is a great preoccupation of ours.
I believe within this context, for reasons I've mentioned, the bicultural, bilingual nature of the duality of this country is such that it's an essential part of our history, so the greater teaching of history would produce that result.
Four years ago we also produced a report card specifically on the teaching of history, and which provinces were doing well with regard to their focus and otherwise. We're looking at doing that again. It may be that we could include a component on bilingualism. I wouldn't be prepared at this point to say we would do that specifically.
I would just mention to you that all our staff at the meeting level, at the coordination level, are bilingual. We go to pretty much every teachers' conference I can think of in this country and we make our materials available bilingually. That includes, for example, always bringing a good quantity of French language material to English conferences, and the reverse, in addition to the language of that conference.
We've had a heavy preoccupation with Quebec, and despite controversy in some quarters over Quebec's approach to the teaching of history, it should be mentioned that they had either the highest or one of the highest scores in terms of the focus they put on it traditionally, so that may be something we'll be looking at.
Again, I apologize. I can't tell you that we have a specific focus on bilingualism in what we're doing right now. It's more of a means than an end.