Free · Always

Fifteen disciplines.
One mission.

Educator-written humanities education across every major discipline — built on Australian curricula and extended internationally. Free, always.

Our founding spirit

"When Rome fell, Cassiodorus built a monastery to preserve what civilisation had made. Quest Humanities exists in that same spirit."

15
Subjects
7
Aust. curricula
IB+
International
Free
Always
History
Modern History
T1
Ancient History
T1
Archaeology
T3
Classics
T3
Society & Culture
Geography
T1
Sociology
T3
Anthropology
T3
ATSI Studies
T3
Civic & Political
Economics
T1
Legal Studies
T3
Politics
T2
Meaning & Interpretation
Philosophy & Reason
T3
Literature
T2
Study of Religion
T3
Media Studies
T3

All subjects

T1 = Live  ·  T2 = Months 3–6  ·  T3 = Month 6+
History Cluster
4 subjects
Modern History
Live now
Ancient History
Live now
Archaeology
Month 6+
Classics
Month 6+
Society & Culture Cluster
4 subjects
Geography
Live now
Sociology
Month 6+
Anthropology
Month 6+
ATSI Studies
Month 6+
Civic & Political Cluster
3 subjects
Economics
Live now
Legal Studies
Coming soon
Politics
Months 3–6
More to come
Meaning & Interpretation Cluster
4 subjects
Philosophy & Reason
Package A live
Literature
Months 3–6
Study of Religion
Month 6+
Media Studies
Month 6+

The QUEST Framework

How it works →

One framework across all fifteen disciplines — taking you from a good question to confident, transferable knowledge.

Q
Question
Frame the inquiry with a question worth asking
U
Unpack
Define concepts, context, and key vocabulary
E
Examine
Analyse sources, evidence, and perspectives
S
Synthesise
Build a reasoned, justified argument
T
Transfer
Apply insights to new contexts and comparisons

Featured articles

All articles →
Economics

Market failure: when markets get it wrong

QCAA Unit 1 · VCE Unit 1 · IB Economics HL
Legal Studies

What is the rule of law, and why does it matter?

QCAA Unit 1 · NESA · VCAA Unit 1
Philosophy & Reason

What is a valid argument? Logic from first principles

QCAA · IB Theory of Knowledge
Ancient History

The fall of Rome: causes, myths, and modern lessons

QCAA · NESA · IB History

Why the humanities?

Read the full case →
1
They teach you to think
Source analysis, argument construction, ethical reasoning — skills that serve every career and every life decision.
2
They make you a citizen
Understanding law, economics, and history is the foundation of informed democratic participation.
3
Human judgement is irreplaceable
AI can summarise. It cannot judge. The premium on human interpretation and ethics has never been higher.
4
They ask the questions that matter
What is justice? What causes war? How should we live? These questions have never been more urgent.
Quest Textbooks — Templates & Study Guides
Planning templates, depth study guides, and flashcard sets — built by teachers, for students.