
For the Love of Learning
If you need help learning and understanding, or if you aspire to be a person doing that helping, you’ll find yourself often in Anderson Hall. It’s home to the Education Department, the Academic Support Center, the Writing Center, and one of the comfiest, sunniest sunny spots ever for studying—the Edwards Atrium.
What’s Cool About It
The building is named for philanthropist and former Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ Board of Trustees member Arthur H. Anderson. In addition to teaching and learning, students in Anderson pray and engage with their religious traditions through the Bonnier Multifaith Center. Even our profs are getting schooled here, through teaching initiatives within the John S. Kendall Center for Engaged Learning. But by far the biggest attraction in Anderson is the Writing Center couch, judged one of the top ugliest couches in America. See it to believe it.
Who will you find here
Lower Level
The Writing Center, the Academic Support Center, and a science/arts classroom
Main Level
Atrium for doing group projects and events and Bonnier Multifaith Center
Upper Level
Kendall Center for Engaged Learning, a student lounge, digital classroom, and education library


Bonnier Multifaith Center
Fostering lives of engaged compassion through the cultivation of diverse religious and spiritual practices.
Rooted in the College’s core values of faith, justice, community, service and excellence, the purpose of the Bonnier Multifaith Center is to foster lives of engaged compassion through cultivating diverse religious and spiritual practices. Activities in the Center include personal and communal meditation and prayer, interfaith conversations, text studies, and contemplative practices that sustain lives of engaged compassion. We invite all members of the Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ community, regardless of their religious and philosophical commitments, to use the Center for personal prayer, reflection, and meditation during unscheduled times and to request and use the Center’s space for organized religious, spiritual, or contemplative practices.