Bender Library
Bender Library is home to over 3 million books as well as numerous academic and research services for students, including the AU Writing Center and the IT Help Desk.
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Bender Library
⭐ Bender Library
Library Services
The dedicated faculty and staff of the Library are eager to show all we have to offer from vast sources of knowledge. We pair individual attention with expert information literacy instruction for individuals and in classes as part of the curriculum. Online you’ll discover many tools to help identify reliable and trusted sources in our wide-ranging collections. In today’s world amid oceans of information, the methods and skills we teach directly result in academic success and research excellence.
We are part of the Washington Research Library Consortium (WRLC), a collaboration of area universities that expands our collection and provides access to exceptionally comprehensive resources beyond our walls.
AU Library’s collections are complex and constantly evolving and growing. We want our community to readily discover and use information, including our unique holdings housed in the Library’s Archives and Special Collections. We continue to build on our strengths in a number of subject areas, such as local Washington, D.C. neighborhood history, our extensive and growing journalism and photojournalism collections, the U.S. Capitol Historical Society archive, and the Peace Corps Community Archive, to name a few. Access to information isn’t limited to traditional print and electronic resources anymore, which is why we provide technology loans, poster and 3-D printing, and a Makerspace. We look forward to seeing these innovations put to use on campus and actively engaging with our users.
We are part of the Washington Research Library Consortium (WRLC), a collaboration of area universities that expands our collection and provides access to exceptionally comprehensive resources beyond our walls.
AU Library’s collections are complex and constantly evolving and growing. We want our community to readily discover and use information, including our unique holdings housed in the Library’s Archives and Special Collections. We continue to build on our strengths in a number of subject areas, such as local Washington, D.C. neighborhood history, our extensive and growing journalism and photojournalism collections, the U.S. Capitol Historical Society archive, and the Peace Corps Community Archive, to name a few. Access to information isn’t limited to traditional print and electronic resources anymore, which is why we provide technology loans, poster and 3-D printing, and a Makerspace. We look forward to seeing these innovations put to use on campus and actively engaging with our users.