 I mean, at the extreme, we have schools where teachers are actually bringing pencils and paper to schools so that the kids can learn at their own expense, not at the taxpayer expense. That affected me. I love the dedication that that reflects, but it saddens me that they're doing that. Seeing class sizes that are so big that the classes have to meet in the auditorium rather than a classroom. Those are the kinds of things that we can't sustain, they're not good for any of us. We're going to get $350 million additional investment in basic education, additional 50 million in special education over what we did last year, and additional 50 million in early childhood education pre-K, and additional 10 million in Head Start. It means smaller class sizes, it means more programs, and it means better schools. People in Pennsylvania simply say they want our schools to be better than they are. They want us to invest in our schools. And I'm proud to be governor at a time when I think we're recognizing that.