One of the gaps is the programming that's available at various points on the continuum.
I'll use Toronto as an example. After grade 8, 25% of the kids will change systems, because they know full well that in Toronto, if you want to access post-secondary, it's basically U of T or Toronto Metropolitan University, and now there's the Université de l'Ontario français.
They think in terms of “where can I go for post-secondary?” There are gaps there. In other words, there's not enough post-secondary programming. That is an issue in many of the provinces.
Also, when you go into rural areas, the choice of programs in secondary school is not what it is in some of the larger centres. There again, people will leave the system.
When you go right to the beginning of the system, in terms of child care, if there are not enough child care spaces for the minorities, the kids will go to anglophone day care, and often they don't end up going to the French school.
There are gaps everywhere in the system. Programming is a big one, because the more programs you have, the more students you have, but it becomes a vicious circle.