Sure.
I think one has to understand the question of access to minority language education, whether that's English in Quebec or French outside of Quebec, in the context of the language debates that took place in Quebec in the 1960s and 1970s. There was growing concern that all of the immigration to Quebec was resulting in parents enrolling their children in English schools. There was a growing fear on the part of some highly respected demographers that the island of Montreal would end up being majority English speaking and that by attracting immigrants, Quebec was financing the creation of itself as a linguistic minority on the island of Montreal. So a variety of legislative instruments were introduced.
First was Bill 22, in which it was decided that the only children who would have access to English schools were those who could pass an English test when they were going into grade one. This was highly criticized because it was viewed that if you succeeded, you went to English school, and if you failed, you were sent off to the hell of French school.
After the election of the Parti Québécois in 1976 and the development of the Charte de la langue française, the criteria were developed on the basis of the education of one parent. If one parent had been educated in English, their children would have access. The original version of that was to restrict access to English education in Quebec to what they called the traditional English-speaking community. First with the Blaikie Supreme Court decision and then with the charter in 1982, that was broadened to one parent having been educated in English in Canada.
All of that, really, was in the context of serious concern with threats to the French language as they were perceived to exist in Quebec, particularly through that period.
It is also worth remembering that Quebec is the only province in which studying the other official language is obligatory right to the end of high school. In Quebec, it's introduced in grade 3, and it's obligatory. They've been moving it down to, I think, grade 1. It is the only province where learning the other official language is an obligatory program right through to the end of high school.
Outside of Quebec, it is obligatory to study French up until some level in every province east of Ontario. West of Ontario, I'm not certain about Manitoba. I don't think it's obligatory. It is an option. There's no obligatory course for French in the western provinces.
I think the idea that people are not learning English in Quebec is a mistaken one, if you look at the obligatory—