Today in News History

On July 13, several notable moments in the history of News stand out. In 1893, They Even Fear His Horses, American tribal chief (born 1836) passed away. In 1934, Aleksei Yeliseyev, Russian engineer and astronaut was born. In 1949, Walt Kuhn, American painter and academic (born 1877) passed away. In 1983, Liu Xiang, Chinese hurdler was born. In 1991, Tyler Skaggs, American baseball player (died 2019) was born. In 2007, Michael Reardon, American mountaineer (born 1965) passed away. In 2014, Jeff Leiding, American football player (born 1961) passed away. In 2024, Thomas Matthew Crooks, American student, known for attempting to assassinate former US President Donald Trump (born 2003) passed away. In 2024, Naomi Pomeroy, American Chef and Restaurateur (born 1974) passed away. In 2024, President of the United States Donald Trump is injured in an assassination attempt while speaking at an election campaign rally near Butler, Pennsylvania. Together, these milestones provide historical context for today's news news and ongoing narratives.

Americans Are Skipping College for No-Degree Jobs That Pay More Than $100,000 a Year

Entrepreneur.com

Entrepreneur.com

·

July 9, 2026

·

lean right
Narrative Analysis: Appeal to Fear
Americans Are Skipping College for No-Degree Jobs That Pay More Than $100,000 a Year

The average tuition for four-year colleges has doubled over 30 years.

Narrative Intelligence Brief

This article was published by Entrepreneur.com, a source frequently categorized with a lean right bias based in United States of America. Our narrative intelligence engine continuously monitors coverage from this outlet to track framing, bias, and rhetorical patterns. In this specific piece, our systems detected the potential use of the "Appeal to Fear" technique. This narrative approach is often used to shape reader perception by highlighting specific emotional or rhetorical angles. By understanding the editorial perspective of Entrepreneur.com, readers can better contextualize the information presented and compare it across our broader media matrix to find the real narrative.

Reliability Insights

P

Technique: Appeal to Fear
System analysis detected use of specific narrative techniques in this piece.
Analysis Methodology
This narrative analysis was generated using the CoDataLab Global Intelligence Engine. Our proprietary AI scans thousands of cross-border sources to identify sentiment patterns, framing techniques, and potential media bias. While AI provides the data-driven foundation, our objective is to empower readers with additional context beyond the standard headline.The content displayed above is a structured summary designed for rapid information processing. For the full original report, please visit the source outlet.

How other outlets are covering this story

Compare narratives across 39 related reports from 39 sources. Real Narrative News aggregates the coverage spectrum so you can see who emphasises what — bias tags reflect the outlet, not the story.

Coverage bias distribution

39 sources

Left 21%

Center 46%

Right 33%


Inc.com

center

· Jul 7, 2026

Think the Entry-Level Job Market is Bad? New Data Shows It’s Actually Worse Than We Thought

As inflation squeezes young workers, a telling shift in job offer declines proves grads are now grabbing any paycheck just to survive.

NPR Topics: Education

center

· Jul 6, 2026

Under a new federal rule, colleges must leave grads better off or lose financial aid

If an undergraduate program's graduates don't earn more than workers who never went to college, that program could be cut off from federal student loans. But is a degree just about making more money?

MindShift

center

· Jul 9, 2026

Under a New Federal Rule, Colleges Must Leave Grads Better Off or Lose Financial Aid

If an undergraduate program's graduates don't earn more than workers who never went to college, that program could be cut off from federal student loans. But is a degree just about making more money?

Utusan Malaysia

center

· Jul 12, 2026

Enggan sambung belajar sebab dapat gaji RM2,000?

KALAU kita tanya anak muda yang tidak mahu sambung belajar, kebanyakan akan memberi alasan – Buat apa pening-pening, berhabis duit, belajar bertahun-tahun, akhirnya gaji sama saja dengan yang tidak belajar tinggi, RM2,000 atau sekadar terima gaji minimum. Senang sahaja kita boleh menjangkakan jawapan ini kerana ia adalah hakikat yang kita boleh lihat sendiri di mana-mana. ... Read more The post Enggan sambung belajar sebab dapat gaji RM2,000? appeared first on Utusan Malaysia.

The i Paper

lean left

· Jul 13, 2026

American families make £20,000 more than us a year – here’s why

Even the UK's best-paid new graduates earn less, on average, than the worst-paid US ones

RedState

right

· Jun 22, 2026

Your Kid May Graduate Into an Economy That No Longer Needs Entry-Level Workers

Your Kid May Graduate Into an Economy That No Longer Needs Entry-Level Workers

The Hill

center

· Jun 26, 2026

We cut MBA prices because America needs more professionals, not fewer

America is running short on educated workers at the exact moment when they matter the most.

Quartz

lean left

· Jul 2, 2026

Colleges keep minting graduates the job market has no use for

A college degree no longer guarantees the job it used to promise. The labor market is running out of roles for an overinflated credentialed class

Higher Ed Dive

center

· Jul 13, 2026

Transferring may not pay off for some students, study suggests

Students just above admissions cutoffs could see lower earnings after moving colleges than those who were rejected, a working paper found.

Times of India

lean right

· Jun 21, 2026

Worked in two restaurants for 'no experience': Graduate says she can't land a minimum-wage job

Worked in two restaurants for 'no experience': Graduate says she can't land a minimum-wage job

Brisbane Times

center

· Jun 22, 2026

Parents pay $10,000 a year to send their children to this Sydney private school. But it doesn’t pay its teachers wages

Teacher salaries account for about two-thirds of every school’s expenditure. But not at Redeemer Baptist School.

KSAT San Antonio

center

· Jun 25, 2026

US jobless aid filings fall to 215,000 last week as layoffs remain low despite economic headwinds

Fewer Americans applied for jobless aid last week as layoffs remain low despite economic headwinds that are creating uncertainty for businesses.

NPR Topics: Health Care

lean left

· May 19, 2026

States sue over new student loan limits on certain nursing and healthcare degrees

New York, Arizona, North Carolina, Kentucky and Nevada are among the states challenging a rule that limits federal student loans for graduate degrees in nursing, physical therapy and more.

The 74

center

· Jun 23, 2026

What Today’s College Students Need That Previous Generations Didn’t

For high school graduates about to head off to college the news is alarming: The degree they’re about to pursue might not land them the job they want. College grads are facing a tough job market, with headlines almost daily declaring their prospects “grim” or “shrinking” or call their “hiring woes” a “job market hell.” []

Wirepoints

right

· Jul 2, 2026

Editorial: Illinois’ population is growing again. But we’re losing our children. – Chicago Tribune*

Fewer kids to fill schools. Fewer high school graduates to enroll in our public universities. Fewer workers to fill jobs, changing housing demand, different transportation habits and needs. ... Wise leaders would look at these numbers and begin long-term planning for the future, recalibrating how we invest state and local revenue, because the system we’ve built isn’t necessarily equipped to service the population of the future.

SundayTimes

lean right

· Jun 30, 2026

NOLUNDI MATOMANE | Why applying for more jobs does not equal more employment

Custom CVs and cover letters can unlock recruiter attention

National Post

lean right

· Jul 2, 2026

Canadians hate being called the 51st state. But they don’t mind moving south of the border, study says

The researchers expected job opportunities to be the No. 1 reason for moving to the U.S., but were surprised by what came in at No. 2

South China Morning Post

lean left

· Jun 27, 2026

Singapore graduates settle for half pay in brutal jobs market

As the class of 2026 join the race to find jobs, unemployed college graduates in Singapore are taking a last-ditch shot at getting ahead via temporary government-funded gigs that earn them half the median first pay cheque. The government’s Graduate Industry Traineeships, known as GRIT, offer a stopgap for graduates to gain industry-relevant experience with government agencies or private businesses, earning between S1,800 to S2,400 (US1,400 to US1,850) per month. The lowest end of that range...

Research Professional News

center

· Jul 1, 2026

Vice-chancellors warn of ‘double squeeze’ on students’ finances

Job-Ready Graduates scheme and rising living costs said to be hitting lower-income and first-in-family students The post Vice-chancellors warn of ‘double squeeze’ on students’ finances appeared first on Research Professional News.

Daily Mail

right

· Jun 22, 2026

Rising living costs push nine in ten university students into term-time work

Rising living costs push nine in ten university students into term-time work

DNyuz

lean right

· Jul 8, 2026

Labor force participation falls to 61.5%, the lowest in 50 years outside COVID, and economists say it’s not just people giving up

Economists have spent the past week arguing about why 720,000 people walked away from the labor force in a single month. Laura Ullrich, director of economics at Indeed Hiring Lab and a former Richmond Fed economist, says that rather than treating June’s slide to a 61.5 labor force participation rate—the lowest reading outside the pandemic []

The Hechinger Report

center

· Jul 13, 2026

OPINION: Poor Southern states have a brain drain problem. Public universities can and should be doing more to help 

Confidence in higher education is declining across the United States. Fewer Americans say a college degree is very important: A growing share believe the system is headed in the wrong direction, particularly when it comes to preparing students for employment. Not surprisingly, college enrollment has fallen in recent years. And nowhere are the stakes of [] The post OPINION: Poor Southern states have a brain drain problem. Public universities can and should be doing more to help appeared first on The Hechinger Report.

Euro Weekly News

center

· Jul 7, 2026

Parents living in Andalucia face rising fees for school breakfast clubs from this September

Sending your kids off to school early so you can work just got a little bit more expensive for families, []

Foreign Policy Journal

left

· Jun 28, 2026

Black College-Educated Women Bear The Brunt Of Trump’s Federal Job Cuts As Unemployment Climbs

The Trump administration’s sweeping federal layoffs and buyouts have hit Black college graduates harder than almost any other group in the American workforce. Nearly half of Black workers in the federal sector hold a bachelor’s degree or higher, making them acutely vulnerable to indiscriminate government workforce reductions. College-educated Black women have experienced the steepest decline [] The post Black College-Educated Women Bear The Brunt Of Trump’s Federal Job Cuts As Unemployment Climbs appeared first on Foreign Policy Journal.

Hot Air

right

· Jun 27, 2026

Minimum Wage Fail

Minimum Wage Fail

The Week

left

· Jun 29, 2026

What’s causing the white working-class ‘disadvantage gap’?

What’s causing the white working-class ‘disadvantage gap’?

Legal Insurrection

right

· Jul 2, 2026

Massachusetts Colleges to Try Three-Year Degree Programs as Schools Struggle With Enrollment

“There’s a whole generation that has listened to their parents complain about their student debt, and they’re about to go off to college, and they’re not really interested in taking on a lifetime of student debt” The post Massachusetts Colleges to Try Three-Year Degree Programs as Schools Struggle With Enrollment first appeared on Le·gal In·sur·rec·tion.

Off The Press

right

· Jul 8, 2026

Report: Wisconsin down 100K manufacturing jobs since 2001

Wisconsin has 100,000 fewer manufacturing jobs than it had in 2001 while health care and social assistance has become the states largest professions, according to a new report from Forward Analytics. Manufacturing was the state’s largest industry in 2001 and now, along with 46 other states, health care and social assistance have overtaken it with []...Click to read more

Independent Online

center

· Jun 23, 2026

Stop waiting on your degree and start working: A graduate’s reality check for the youth

Stop waiting on your degree and start working: A graduate’s reality check for the youth

The Rising Nepal

center

· Jul 9, 2026

Over 1 in 3 returnee migrants paid no recruitment costs: NSO

Kathmandu, July 10: Around one-third of Nepali return migrant workers did not pay any recruitment fees or related costs...

Toronto Sun

right

· Jun 28, 2026

Jobs still up for grabs for students seeking summer employment

Never too late to find seasonal employment: Expert

Fortune

center

· Jul 12, 2026

Want to earn nearly $100,000 within 5 years of graduating? Study engineering, Fed research says

80 of the top 10 college majors with the highest incomes five years after graduation are engineering degrees, New York Federal Reserve study shows.

Slate Magazine

lean left

· Jun 25, 2026

The Same Disturbing Thing Befalls Everyone Who Earns $100,000 at My Job. I Can’t Let it Happen to Me.

I refuse to suffer the same fate.

Legit.ng

center

· Jun 25, 2026

Which degrees pay off? Research reveals shocking earnings gap for graduates, full list emerges

Research reveals significant earning disparities among university degrees. Discover which subjects lead to higher lifetime earnings and the implications for students

MyJoyOnline

center

· Jul 5, 2026

No degree is useless in an economy that works – Kwaku Asare replies Adutwum

The debate over whether certain university degrees are useless has taken a new turn, with governance expert Prof. Kwaku Asare arguing that the problem is not the programmes themselves, but the political and economic structures that fail to absorb graduates into meaningful employment.

Seeking Alpha

lean right

· Jul 8, 2026

SPTI: Hormuz Flare-Ups, Bifurcating Jobs Figures Limit Rate Downside

SPTI: Hormuz Flare-Ups, Bifurcating Jobs Figures Limit Rate Downside

Alberta Worker

left

· Jul 9, 2026

Athabasca University workers get 12% raise

This is pretty much what all postsecondary workers are getting now, even though their real wages have fallen below 12 over the last two contracts.

The Daily Signal

lean right

· Jul 10, 2026

More Than 40,000 H-1B Visa Holders Work in Texas Amid Calls for Reform

In Texas, about 650,000 to 680,000 people are unemployed, yet more than 40,000 individuals are authorized to work in the state under active H-1B visas. The H-1B visa program has become a central topic of debate across the country, including in Texas, with critics complaining that companies are hiring foreign workers instead of American employees....

Yen.com.gh

center

· Jul 8, 2026

US: Florida bans undocumented immigrants from enrolling in 28 public colleges

The state of Florida bans undocumented immigrants from public colleges and adult education programmes, significantly restricting access to education opportunities

Topics:

World · 16
Politics · 10
Education · 6
Business · 4
Unknown · 2

Related coverage for "Americans Are Skipping College for No-Degree Jobs That Pay More Than $100,000 a Year": Inc.com — Think the Entry-Level Job Market is Bad? New Data Shows It’s Actually Worse Than We Thought. NPR Topics: Education — Under a new federal rule, colleges must leave grads better off or lose financial aid. MindShift — Under a New Federal Rule, Colleges Must Leave Grads Better Off or Lose Financial Aid. Utusan Malaysia — Enggan sambung belajar sebab dapat gaji RM2,000?. The i Paper — American families make £20,000 more than us a year – here’s why. RedState — Your Kid May Graduate Into an Economy That No Longer Needs Entry-Level Workers. The Hill — We cut MBA prices because America needs more professionals, not fewer. Quartz — Colleges keep minting graduates the job market has no use for. Higher Ed Dive — Transferring may not pay off for some students, study suggests. Times of India — Worked in two restaurants for 'no experience': Graduate says she can't land a minimum-wage job. Brisbane Times — Parents pay $10,000 a year to send their children to this Sydney private school. But it doesn’t pay its teachers wages. KSAT San Antonio — US jobless aid filings fall to 215,000 last week as layoffs remain low despite economic headwinds. NPR Topics: Health Care — States sue over new student loan limits on certain nursing and healthcare degrees. The 74 — What Today’s College Students Need That Previous Generations Didn’t. Wirepoints — Editorial: Illinois’ population is growing again. But we’re losing our children. – Chicago Tribune*. SundayTimes — NOLUNDI MATOMANE | Why applying for more jobs does not equal more employment. National Post — Canadians hate being called the 51st state. But they don’t mind moving south of the border, study says. South China Morning Post — Singapore graduates settle for half pay in brutal jobs market. Research Professional News — Vice-chancellors warn of ‘double squeeze’ on students’ finances. Daily Mail — Rising living costs push nine in ten university students into term-time work. DNyuz — Labor force participation falls to 61.5%, the lowest in 50 years outside COVID, and economists say it’s not just people giving up. The Hechinger Report — OPINION: Poor Southern states have a brain drain problem. Public universities can and should be doing more to help . Euro Weekly News — Parents living in Andalucia face rising fees for school breakfast clubs from this September. Foreign Policy Journal — Black College-Educated Women Bear The Brunt Of Trump’s Federal Job Cuts As Unemployment Climbs. Hot Air — Minimum Wage Fail. The Week — What’s causing the white working-class ‘disadvantage gap’? . Legal Insurrection — Massachusetts Colleges to Try Three-Year Degree Programs as Schools Struggle With Enrollment. Off The Press — Report: Wisconsin down 100K manufacturing jobs since 2001. Independent Online — Stop waiting on your degree and start working: A graduate’s reality check for the youth. The Rising Nepal — Over 1 in 3 returnee migrants paid no recruitment costs: NSO. Toronto Sun — Jobs still up for grabs for students seeking summer employment. Fortune — Want to earn nearly $100,000 within 5 years of graduating? Study engineering, Fed research says. Slate Magazine — The Same Disturbing Thing Befalls Everyone Who Earns $100,000 at My Job. I Can’t Let it Happen to Me.. Legit.ng — Which degrees pay off? Research reveals shocking earnings gap for graduates, full list emerges. MyJoyOnline — No degree is useless in an economy that works – Kwaku Asare replies Adutwum. Seeking Alpha — SPTI: Hormuz Flare-Ups, Bifurcating Jobs Figures Limit Rate Downside. Alberta Worker — Athabasca University workers get 12% raise. The Daily Signal — More Than 40,000 H-1B Visa Holders Work in Texas Amid Calls for Reform. Yen.com.gh — US: Florida bans undocumented immigrants from enrolling in 28 public colleges