Ranking
Best Radio, Television, and Digital Communication Colleges in Maryland 2026
7 Maryland colleges offering Radio, Television, and Digital Communication, ranked by EduGradify value grade.
- Schools ranked
- 7
- Cheapest net price
- $13,868
- Top earnings 10y
- $82,860
- Public / Private
- 3 / 4
University of Maryland-College Park
A- ROI score
- 13.21
- Net price
- $15,678
- Earnings 10y
- $82,860
- Acceptance
- 44.8%
University of Baltimore
A- ROI score
- 11.06
- Net price
- $13,868
- Earnings 10y
- $61,335
- Acceptance
- 78.7%
Towson University
B- ROI score
- 9.24
- Net price
- $17,413
- Earnings 10y
- $64,390
- Acceptance
- 82%
Notre Dame of Maryland University
B- ROI score
- 8.52
- Net price
- $19,169
- Earnings 10y
- $65,344
- Acceptance
- 82.2%
Loyola University Maryland
C- ROI score
- 6.76
- Net price
- $30,574
- Earnings 10y
- $82,652
- Acceptance
- 75.5%
Stevenson University
C- ROI score
- 5.86
- Net price
- $26,505
- Earnings 10y
- $62,079
- Acceptance
- 78.9%
Maryland Institute College of Art
D- ROI score
- 2.65
- Net price
- $42,729
- Earnings 10y
- $45,212
- Acceptance
- 76.8%
How we picked this list
This list starts with Maryland schools with positive Radio, Television, and Digital Communication program-share evidence, then sorts by EduGradify's school-wide ROI proxy: ten-year median earnings weighed against average net price. The set's average EduGradify ROI score is 8.19 (3 public, 4 private).
Every figure comes from the U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard. See our full methodology for the formulas.
FAQ
Who leads this ranking?
University of Maryland-College Park in College Park, MD tops this ranking. EduGradify value grade is A.
How does EduGradify pick this list?
We rank this set by roi score using the U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard — see our methodology for the full formula. No paid placements, no surveys.
How many Maryland colleges are in this list?
7 Maryland colleges qualified for this ranking based on available federal data.
What does net price mean here?
Net price is what students actually pay after grants and scholarships — not the sticker price. It is reported by each college to the U.S. Department of Education.