How this school serves students from different economic backgrounds, including Pell students, first-generation pathways, and long-term mobility outcomes.
Maryville University of Saint Louis admits 95.1% of applicants, reflecting a broad-access admissions posture that aligns with the university's health-focused mission. Among enrolled undergraduates, 36.4% receive Pell Grants and 29.6% are first-generation college students. Transfer enrollment is a meaningful part of the student body, at 53.3%, signaling that Maryville serves students who are restarting or accelerating their academic paths alongside traditional first-year entrants. Azimuth ranks Maryville University of Saint Louis #599 for access among nonprofit four-year institutions. Retention stands at 84.7%, and the six-year graduation rate is 66.2%, with 51.1% of Pell-eligible students completing within that window — a completion pattern that reflects the university's sustained investment in student support across income levels. Azimuth ranks Maryville University of Saint Louis #716 for mobility among nonprofit four-year institutions. Median earnings for low-income graduates reach $43,700 on a historical ten-year Scorecard measure, placing this cohort in the 52.0 percentile for low-income graduate median earnings among nonprofit four-year institutions. Given that 36.4% of undergraduates receive Pell Grants, these outcomes reflect a meaningful share of the student body — not a narrow slice. As explored in Azimuth's analysis of access versus outcomes at scale, institutions like Maryville that combine broad enrollment of lower-income students with competitive graduate earnings represent a distinctive mobility pathway in private nonprofit higher education.
Maryville University of Saint Louis admits 95.1% of applicants, reflecting a broad-access admissions posture that aligns with the university's health-focused mission. Among enrolled undergraduates, 36.4% receive Pell Grants and 29.6% are first-generation college students. Transfer enrollment is a meaningful part of the student body, at 53.3%, signaling that Maryville serves students who are restarting or accelerating their academic paths alongside traditional first-year entrants. Azimuth ranks Maryville University of Saint Louis #599 for access among nonprofit four-year institutions. Retention stands at 84.7%, and the six-year graduation rate is 66.2%, with 51.1% of Pell-eligible students completing within that window — a completion pattern that reflects the university's sustained investment in student support across income levels. Azimuth ranks Maryville University of Saint Louis #716 for mobility among nonprofit four-year institutions. Median earnings for low-income graduates reach $43,700 on a historical ten-year Scorecard measure, placing this cohort in the 52.0 percentile for low-income graduate median earnings among nonprofit four-year institutions. Given that 36.4% of undergraduates receive Pell Grants, these outcomes reflect a meaningful share of the student body — not a narrow slice. As explored in Azimuth's analysis of access versus outcomes at scale, institutions like Maryville that combine broad enrollment of lower-income students with competitive graduate earnings represent a distinctive mobility pathway in private nonprofit higher education.
Maryville University of Saint Louis admits 95.1% of applicants, reflecting a broad-access admissions posture that aligns with the university's health-focused mission. Among enrolled undergraduates, 36.4% receive Pell Grants and 29.6% are first-generation college students. Transfer enrollment is a meaningful part of the student body, at 53.3%, signaling that Maryville serves students who are restarting or accelerating their academic paths alongside traditional first-year entrants. Azimuth ranks Maryville University of Saint Louis #599 for access among nonprofit four-year institutions. Retention stands at 84.7%, and the six-year graduation rate is 66.2%, with 51.1% of Pell-eligible students completing within that window — a completion pattern that reflects the university's sustained investment in student support across income levels. Azimuth ranks Maryville University of Saint Louis #716 for mobility among nonprofit four-year institutions. Median earnings for low-income graduates reach $43,700 on a historical ten-year Scorecard measure, placing this cohort in the 52.0 percentile for low-income graduate median earnings among nonprofit four-year institutions. Given that 36.4% of undergraduates receive Pell Grants, these outcomes reflect a meaningful share of the student body — not a narrow slice. As explored in Azimuth's analysis of access versus outcomes at scale, institutions like Maryville that combine broad enrollment of lower-income students with competitive graduate earnings represent a distinctive mobility pathway in private nonprofit higher education.