 We consist of ten full-day sessions plus two walking tours of one is downtown New York. Last year we did the other one Uptown in Harlem. And then there's a series of after-school workshops and book signings by artists and historians that are, those are open to that cohort and all the teachers that are in and have gone through the various grants which is now hundreds of people in that community. For the workshop that we just did we put together a slideshow. One of the images in Picture America is Washington Crossing the Delaware, the Emanuel Leutze giant painting. And we gave them all copies on the CD today of the slideshow where we had found 50 different iterations of that image that were used to sell puzzles, sell knives, sell Budweiser beer in 1776, sell Las Vegas tourism, all sorts of, you know, from the sacred to the profane ways that the image. And so that was kind of just fun for the teachers and fun for the kids to see. There's a serious message there as well about how images are used to sell things and who owns history and who owns the images and how they can be twisted really in a variety of different ways or manipulated.