While studies suggest recession graduates tend to fall behind their nonrecession peers in terms of salary and don’t catch up for 10 to 20 years, there are ways to catch up more quickly and make up the gap.
This year's college graduates enter one of the best job markets since the Great Recession.
A look at the state of wages for young college graduates and how wages break down by education level.
It's a good job market for the class of 2018, but not everyone with a B.A. is likely to fare well economically.
Public funding for higher ed may be getting scarcer, but a college degree is only getting more valuable.
Financial damage can be lasting, several studies suggest.
Graduates from the Great Recession at the University of Arkansas returned to give advice to this year's graduates.
Here's what notable speakers had to say to the classes of 2009 and 2010, when job opportunities were scarce.
Sarah Kendzior describes "systemic inequality, a lot of suffering among citizens" in her collection of essays.
Despite common narratives, 20- and 30-somethings are just as interested and hopeful about homeownership as everyone else.