I have another question for you. You talked about the women who had taken the courses and you mentioned that five of them are working, but not necessarily in fields for which you had trained them. However, they are working, one in a library and the others in various locations.
So then, I was wondering if being able to provide them with tools such as self-confidence and the desire to succeed is even more important that the ultimate goal of this course, which is to find them jobs in the mines or some other type of work? Is it not more important to instill in them, through the training process, the confidence that they can do anything they set their minds to, the “yes, you can“ attitude? Isn't that as important as the training itself?