Top Ranked Programs
Maryville University of Saint Louis's program mix is anchored in Health, which accounts for 18% of graduates — a concentration that shapes the institution's overall earnings profile and career-pathway identity. Arts represents 6% of degrees and Education accounts for 4%, rounding out a portfolio tilted toward applied professional fields. Across 30 programs serving roughly 890 students annually, 13 meet Azimuth's ranking threshold — a ratio that reflects the institution's focused program scale. The strongest earnings come from Intelligence, Command Control and Information Operations, where 74 graduates earn median earnings of $84,342 four years after enrollment. Nursing follows with 164 graduates earning $79,219, and Azimuth ranks the program #263 for median earnings four years after enrollment among nonprofit four-year institutions. Azimuth ranks Health Services/Allied Health/Health Sciences, General #19 for median earnings four years after enrollment among nonprofit four-year institutions, with 37 graduates earning $74,114. The largest program by cohort is Nursing with 164 graduates earning $79,219, and Azimuth ranks it #263 for median earnings four years after enrollment among nonprofit four-year institutions. The Psychology, General program graduates 86 students with median earnings of $57,922, and Azimuth ranks it #73 for median earnings four years after enrollment among nonprofit four-year institutions. Several of Maryville University of Saint Louis's health-oriented programs — particularly nursing and allied health fields — are high-mobility pathways where graduates enter the workforce directly into sectors with sustained hiring demand. Programs like Intelligence, Command Control and Information Operations and Business Administration serve as direct-to-workforce pipelines, while fields such as Design and Applied Arts may involve grad-school-dependent trajectories where four-year earnings undercount lifetime outcomes. The [supply-demand map](/analysis/supply-demand-map-college-degrees/) provides context for how these program families align with national labor-market demand, and the [program-ranking methodology](/analysis/college-program-rankings-how-to-actually-evaluate-programs/) explains how Azimuth evaluates programs across cohort scale and earnings. ```