Absolutely. We do the majority of our work in rural and remote communities where we focus on that in every program we offer. We bring in the community members. We invite the parents, community leaders, and local government to come in, not only to see what the kids are doing but to participate with them. Because a lot of these kids might be first-generation university or college kids and no one before them has gone, we really need to work on exposing the parents, the teachers, and the people in these kids' lives to these experiences.
If we go into a rural community and deliver a camp, the kids might be inspired and think differently, but if they then go home or to school and there's no one else who is encouraging them to consider these fields, their interest is not going to build. The investment in teachers and parents lasts so much longer than what we can do in a week. We need to do both. We need to get that inspiration and exposure happening, and then we need to support the people who can continue that message on a daily basis.