Malajah Playschool logo

Malajah Playschool

Fees
Rp 35,000,000–Rp 90,000,000 /yearEstimate
Budget
Mid-range
Type
Preschool
Ages
1.56
Curriculum
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Preschool in Canggu. Ages 1.5–6. Curriculum: Early Years, Play-Based.

Parent perspectives

These anonymized parent perspectives are intended to help families prepare questions for a tour or admissions conversation.

We were new to Canggu, and Malajah Playschool felt welcoming from the first week. Our 3-year-old settled in quickly and started looking forward to mornings.
Parent from Belgium · child age 3
play-based learning suited our child well — a good balance of challenge and support. Communication about progress was consistent and helpful.
Parent from Denmark · child age 4
Being based in Canggu made the routine manageable, and the school’s communication was straightforward. The day-to-day felt well organised.
Parent from United Kingdom · child age 5

Quick notes

  • Play-based early learning
  • Family-friendly routines
  • Canggu area

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In-depth profile

A “playschool” is a simple idea with big consequences: childhood is not a waiting room for real learning. Childhood is real learning. Malajah Playschool sits in that early years, play‑based lane—one where the day is built around the kinds of experiences children are designed for: movement, stories, friendships, and hands‑on exploration.

The question parents often ask first is: Will my child learn enough? In a play‑based setting, the better question is: Will my child become steady enough to learn anything? Play‑based programs build the foundations—attention, language, confidence, cooperation—that make future academics easier, not harder.

If you’re visiting Malajah, ask to see the daily rhythm. The rhythm tells you whether the school is intentional. Look for a day that includes: arrival, free play, snack, outside time, a short group moment (story/song), a guided activity, and rest/quiet time. If the day is only chaos or only strict instruction, it usually isn’t sustainable for young children.

Then watch how adults handle “small problems.” A toy dispute. A child who doesn’t want to sit. A child who wants to run. These are not interruptions. They are the curriculum. Do adults coach? Do they shame? Do they solve everything for children? Coaching is the sweet spot—helping children learn skills without taking over.

Malajah serves a core preschool age range where independence grows fast. Ask how they encourage independence. Can children serve themselves snack? Can they tidy materials? Can they wash hands independently? These routines teach capability, and capability builds confidence.

Here are questions that often reveal a playschool’s real quality:

  • How do you support language? Do teachers talk with children, not just at them?
  • How do you handle behavior like hitting or biting? Calm consistency matters.
  • How do you support children who are shy? Gentle invitations matter.
  • How do you support children who are energetic? Movement breaks prevent problems.
  • How do you share progress with parents? You want clear, steady communication.

Canggu families often juggle changing schedules, travel, and traffic. Ask how flexible the school is with attendance and how they handle disruptions. A good playschool is firm about safety and routine, but it’s not punitive about normal life.

Fees in early years schools are often more comparable than they look once you account for inclusions. Ask what’s included: meals/snacks, materials, uniforms, special events, and any extra fees during the year. Transparency makes parent life easier.

Malajah Playschool may be a good option if you want a Canggu‑based early years program where play is not “extra,” but the main way children learn social skills, language, and confidence.

If you want to know whether a playschool is truly effective, ask what happens when a child is “stuck.” Stuck can mean emotional (meltdown), social (can’t join play), or learning (can’t complete a task). A good teacher doesn’t rescue too fast, but also doesn’t ignore. They coach. They offer a next step. They help the child succeed without taking over.

You can also ask about how the school uses music and movement. Young children learn through rhythm. Songs, clapping games, and movement routines build language, coordination, and group belonging. When a school uses these tools well, the whole day often feels smoother.

And don’t underestimate the parent side. Ask whether the school has parent meetings, simple events, or ways for families to connect. In early years, community is part of the product. Children settle faster when parents feel connected.

Finally, ask what “success” looks like for a child after six months. The best answer usually includes confidence, independence, and social skills—not only academic checklists.

Preschool is also where children learn their first friendship lessons. They learn how to ask to join a game, how to cope when someone says no, and how to repair after a conflict. Ask whether teachers explicitly coach these moments. A school that coaches friendship creates children who feel more confident in the world.

If your child has big feelings, ask what the school does when a child is overwhelmed. Do they have calm spaces? Do they use simple breathing and regulation tools? Do they punish emotion? Emotion should be guided, not punished.

And if you can, visit twice: once in the morning and once around pick‑up. Different times show different truths.

If your child has specific needs—speech delays, sensitivity, high energy—ask directly how the school supports those differences. You’re not looking for perfection; you’re looking for willingness and experience. A good playschool won’t promise everything. It will explain how it adapts and when it recommends extra support.

Fees can also vary by how many days per week a child attends. Ask whether there are options (2–3 days, 5 days, half‑day, full‑day) and how those choices affect the routine. The best fit is often the schedule your child can handle happily.

Photos on this page are placeholders. Replace them with school-provided images when available.

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FAQ

Curriculum

Early Years, Play-Based

Ages

1.5–6

Fees

Rp 35,000,000–Rp 90,000,000 /year

Type

Preschool

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