Classical Quest vs Visual Latin: Curriculum vs Practice
Published by Classical Quest Team ยท April 10, 2026 ยท 8 min read
If you are evaluating Visual Latin and Classical Quest, you are probably asking the wrong question. These tools are not direct competitors. Visual Latin teaches Latin through Dwane Thomas's video lessons and printed workbooks. Classical Quest helps students practice and retain what they have already learned. Most homeschool families who succeed at Latin use one tool from each of these two categories โ a teaching curriculum and a practice platform โ because they solve different problems.
This is an honest comparison. If your family is choosing Visual Latin as your primary Latin curriculum, Classical Quest is a natural companion. If you are using a different teaching curriculum (Henle, First Form, Latin for Children, Memoria Press), the same principle applies. This article explains what each tool is, what each does well, and how they fit together in a classical homeschool routine.
What Is Visual Latin?
Visual Latin is a video-based Latin curriculum created by Dwane Thomas and distributed through Compass Classroom. It consists of two levels โ Visual Latin 1 and Visual Latin 2 โ each spanning roughly 30 lessons. Each lesson is a short teaching video (typically 10โ20 minutes) followed by a printed worksheet. The course follows a functional grammar approach: students learn Latin by translating sentences from the first lesson, building vocabulary and grammar gradually.
Visual Latin 1 is appropriate for students around ages 10โ14. Visual Latin 2 continues the sequence for students ready for more complex grammar and translation. Dwane Thomas is an excellent teacher โ engaging, clear, occasionally funny, and deeply knowledgeable. Parents consistently report that their kids actually enjoy watching the videos, which is no small thing for a Latin curriculum.
Visual Latin is sold as a streaming subscription through Compass Classroom or as a downloadable/physical package. Pricing varies, but expect to pay roughly $20โ25 per month for streaming access or around $100โ150 to buy a level outright. The printed workbooks are sold separately or bundled depending on the package.
What Is Classical Quest?
Classical Quest is a web-based practice platform built for classical homeschool families. It does not teach Latin from scratch. Instead, it provides the repetition, retrieval practice, and retention tools that turn a lesson you watched last week into vocabulary you still know six months from now. Classical Quest covers all 8 Grammar Stage subjects in one place: Latin, Timeline, Math, English, Science, Geography, and Fine Arts, and Bible.
The Latin content includes 470+ vocabulary words drawn from the most widely used classical curricula (Henle, First Form, Latin for Children, Song School Latin), with etymological hints on every word. Spaced review schedules each card when a student is likely to need another pass. Declension and conjugation drills, 50+ games, and a Parent Dashboard round out the platform.
Classical Quest has a free tier (typing, geography, first 50 Latin words, and Daily Quest) and paid plans that unlock everything: $9.99/mo student, $14.99/mo family, or $249 for a legacy one-time purchase. The platform is ESA-eligible in 18+ states.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Visual Latin | Classical Quest |
|---|---|---|
| Primary purpose | Teaches Latin from scratch | Practices what you already learned |
| Format | Video lessons + printed workbook | Web app โ drills, games, flashcards |
| Teacher presence | Dwane Thomas on video | Latin Tutor (on-demand explanations) |
| Spaced repetition | No โ sequential lessons | Yes โ automatic review schedule |
| Vocabulary retention tools | Worksheet review | Flashcards, games, daily review |
| Grammar reference | Built into lessons | Glossary, charts, free reference pages |
| Other subjects | Latin only | 6 additional classical subjects |
| Parent Dashboard | No | Yes โ progress across all students |
| Free tier | Limited samples | Typing, geography, 50 Latin words, Daily Quest |
| Paid price | ~$20โ25/mo streaming | $9.99/mo student ยท $14.99/mo family |
| ESA-eligible | Sometimes (varies by state) | Yes โ 18+ states |
Visual Latin's Strengths
- A real teacher on screen.Dwane Thomas's videos are the heart of the curriculum. He explains concepts the way a good tutor would, with humor and clarity. For families where the parent does not know Latin, having a teacher on video removes the need to learn alongside your student.
- Functional approach. Students translate real Latin sentences from the first lesson, rather than drilling endings in isolation for months before encountering anything meaningful. This keeps motivation high and builds actual translation skills.
- Proven curriculum.Visual Latin has been around for over a decade and has a track record with homeschool families. Compass Classroom's customer service and community support are strong.
- Complete in itself.If you buy Visual Latin and follow it faithfully, your student will learn Latin. You do not strictly need another tool โ though retention will always be the challenge.
Reinforce Visual Latin with daily vocabulary practice
Classical Quest's spaced repetition keeps Latin vocabulary fresh between video lessons โ so students remember what they learned last month, not just last week.
Where Classical Quest Adds Value
Visual Latin teaches Latin. But like any curriculum, its weakness is retention over time. A student can watch lesson 12, ace the worksheet, and forget half of it by lesson 20. This is not a flaw in Visual Latin โ it is how human memory works. Retention requires active recall spaced over time, which is a different kind of work than watching a video lesson.
Classical Quest is built specifically for that retention problem. The automatic review schedule brings each vocabulary word back when the student is likely to need it again. Words reviewed correctly get pushed out to longer intervals. Words missed come back the next day. That follows the basic idea behind spaced practice, and it is what flashcards in a paper box cannot do.
Beyond retention, Classical Quest adds a few things Visual Latin does not offer: etymological hints (showing the English words derived from each Latin root), a Latin Tutor for on-demand explanations when a student gets stuck, 50+Latin games for reluctant learners, and a Parent Dashboard that lets you monitor progress without hovering over your student's shoulder.
How to Use Them Together
The most common successful pattern we see is simple: Visual Latin is the teaching curriculum. Classical Quest is the practice companion. Here is how a typical week looks:
- Monday:Watch Visual Latin lesson. Complete the worksheet. New vocabulary gets added to Classical Quest's review queue.
- TuesdayโFriday: 10 minutes of Classical Quest per day. The review schedule brings up the new vocabulary plus any older words that are due. By Friday, the new words have had several retrieval passes.
- Weekend:Either review the Visual Latin lesson, play a Classical Quest game for fun reinforcement, or take the weekend off โ the schedule will catch up on Monday.
This pattern works with any teaching curriculum, not just Visual Latin. If you are using Henle, First Form, Latin for Children, or any other Latin program, the same teaching-plus-practice structure applies. Classical Quest was designed to be curriculum-neutral on purpose.
Which One Do I Need?
If you have not started Latin yet and need something to teach it to you or your student, you need a teaching curriculum first. Visual Latin is one strong option, as are Henle Latin, First Form Latin, and Latin for Children. Pick one and stick with it.
If you already have a teaching curriculum (Visual Latin or any other), and what you are missing is retention, daily practice, and motivation, that is what Classical Quest is for. The free tier lets you try it without committing anything.
If you are already deep into Visual Latin and your student is struggling to remember vocabulary, the problem is almost certainly spaced repetition. Adding 10 minutes of Via Latina per day is often the single change that turns the whole thing around.
A Note on Honesty
I run Classical Quest, so I have an obvious bias. But I am a homeschool dad first, and I have recommended Visual Latin to friends whose children needed a different kind of teacher than I could be. The two products are not enemies. Compass Classroom makes excellent materials and Dwane Thomas is a gift to the homeschool community. If your student needs a video teacher, buy Visual Latin. Then come back and add Classical Quest for the retention side โ that is what it was built for.
The worst outcome is for a family to spend $150 on Visual Latin, lose traction by week 15 because of the retention gap, and conclude that Latin is too hard. That is solvable with a better practice tool. Do not let retention be the thing that kills your family's Latin journey.
Already using Visual Latin? Add spaced repetition for retention that actually sticks. Free to start โ no credit card.
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