 So one of the things high school principals, the district leaders, others in K-12 have said is, you know, how do we really ensure that students are ready for the next steps beyond high school? How do we really make high school relevant for students? How do we engage students in their daily courses and figure out, you know, what does life look like beyond high school and how can they really prepare them for the next steps? And that looks like having a great paying job. It looks like being ready for a career and going to college. And as a parent, I want my students to start earlier to think about, you know, how can they be exposed to the world of work? One of the things that's really evolved is the thought about apprenticeships. As we talk about for students and parents, right, there's some stigma or just confusion with what is an apprenticeship, right? Or is it welding or something in the trades? And we know today's apprenticeship really cover the entire landscape of banking and business and hospitality. And we've just talked about making teaching a principal. And it's not that you, if you have an apprenticeship with banking, it's not that you're going to be a banker for 30 years, right? But how do you learn those skills that then could lead to other essential skills and work and along the way might get an associate's degree paid for? We have several thousand students every year graduate with a high school diploma in one hand and a college degree. So, you know, we see this as a way for students to try an industry and really get deep in it to prepare them for what the world of work is like and really get a full experience and breadth about what does it mean to work and honor and work and honor and all paths and then provide them options as the next step, whether they want to continue their education, get a good paying job, all of those things turn for them.