Top Ranked Programs
California State University-San Bernardino's program mix is anchored in Business, which accounts for 18% of degree output — a concentration that shapes the institution's overall earnings profile. Social Sciences represents 10% of graduates and Arts accounts for 4%, rounding out a portfolio weighted toward applied professional fields. Business Administration is the program that combines the largest cohort scale with strong earnings, making it the single biggest contributor to the university's aggregate financial outcomes. Across 36 programs serving roughly 3,790 students annually, 29 meet Azimuth's ranking threshold. Among the largest programs, Business Administration program graduates 686 students annually with median earnings of $56,361 four years after enrollment, and Azimuth ranks the program #221 nationally for median earnings four years after enrollment among nonprofit four-year institutions. The Psychology, General program graduates 536 students with median earnings of $48,326, and Azimuth ranks it #127 nationally for median earnings four years after enrollment among nonprofit four-year institutions. Sociology (277 graduates, $48,954 in median earnings) and Criminal Justice (238 graduates, $54,275) represent the next-largest cohorts. On the earnings side, Artificial Intelligence leads with median earnings of $66,202 four years after enrollment from a cohort of 140 graduates, and Azimuth ranks the program #178 nationally among nonprofit four-year institutions. Business Administration follows at $56,361 with 686 graduates. The earnings range across programs reflects California State University-San Bernardino's applied-professional orientation. Higher-earning fields like Artificial Intelligence and Kinesiology ($54,944 in median earnings from 205 graduates) channel students into direct-to-workforce careers where four-year earnings capture real labor-market outcomes. Programs like General Studies (223 graduates, $52,799) are more likely grad-school-dependent pathways where four-year earnings undercount the full trajectory for students who continue to graduate or professional study. The [supply-demand map for college graduates](/analysis/supply-demand-map-college-degrees/) provides additional context for how the institution's dominant program families align with regional and national hiring demand, and the [program-ranking methodology](/analysis/college-program-rankings-how-to-actually-evaluate-programs/) explains how Azimuth evaluates programs nationally.