SPICE Framework vs National Preschool Curriculum Standard: What’s the Difference?

Introduction

If you have been researching Islamic preschools in Malaysia, you have almost certainly encountered two curriculum names: KSPK (the national standard) and SPICE (associated with Brainy Bunch International Islamic Montessori). Parents often wonder whether these are competing standards, whether one is better, and what the difference actually means for their child’s day-to-day learning.

This guide answers all three questions. Understanding the relationship between national curriculum standards and proprietary Islamic curriculum frameworks helps parents evaluate preschools more accurately — and ask better questions when they visit.


What Is KSPK?

KSPK stands for Kurikulum Standard Prasekolah Kebangsaan — the National Preschool Curriculum Standard. Published by the Kementerian Pendidikan Malaysia (KPM), it is the mandatory curriculum framework for all registered preschools in Malaysia serving children aged 4 to 6.

KSPK is the minimum standard that every licensed Tadika must deliver. It was revised and updated in 2017 to align with Malaysia’s national education transformation agenda, with an emphasis on holistic development and 21st century skills.

KSPK’s Six Curriculum Strands

StrandDescription
CommunicationLanguage development — Bahasa Malaysia, English, and mother tongue
Spiritual, Attitudes & ValuesIslamic Studies for Muslim children; moral education for non-Muslim children; character and values
HumanitiesPeople, environment, social relationships, community
Science & TechnologyBasic scientific inquiry, technology familiarity, logical thinking
Physical DevelopmentGross and fine motor skills, health, hygiene, physical activity
Creativity & AestheticsArts, music, movement, creative expression

Source: Kementerian Pendidikan Malaysia KSPK 2017; ilmify research, March 2026

KSPK’s Four Areas of Development

Alongside the six curriculum strands, KSPK targets four areas of holistic child development:

Development AreaWhat It Covers
PhysicalGross and fine motor, health habits, body awareness
CognitiveThinking skills, early literacy and numeracy, problem-solving
LanguageCommunication in BM, English, mother tongue
Social-EmotionalRelationships, emotional regulation, character, values

Source: KPM KSPK 2017; ilmify research, March 2026

KSPK is the foundation. Every Islamic preschool in Malaysia builds on it — or, for quality schools, builds significantly above it.


What Is the SPICE Framework?

SPICE is a proprietary curriculum framework developed by Brainy Bunch International Islamic Montessori. It is not a national standard — it is Brainy Bunch’s own philosophy of holistic Islamic child development, organised into five pillars:

SPICE PillarFull NameWhat It Develops
SSpiritual (Iman Excellence)Islamic faith, Quran, solat, Islamic character, aqidah
PPhysical (Fitness Excellence)Gross motor, health, outdoor activity, Islamic physical practices
IIntellectual (Academic Excellence)Literacy, numeracy, Iqra’, language, critical thinking
CCreativity (Life-Skills Excellence)Practical life, arts, Montessori sensorial, creative expression
EEmotion (Emotion Excellence)Emotional intelligence, social skills, Islamic character, self-regulation

Source: Brainy Bunch official curriculum; ilmify research, March 2026

The SPICE framework is Brainy Bunch’s way of organising the full range of developmental outcomes it targets — including those required by KSPK and additional Islamic outcomes that go beyond the national minimum.


How SPICE and KSPK Relate to Each Other

They are not competing — they are nested. KSPK is the regulatory floor; SPICE is Brainy Bunch’s response to the question “what does exceptional Islamic early childhood education look like above that floor?”

LayerWhat It IsWho Sets It
KSPKNational minimum curriculum standardKPM — mandatory for all registered Tadika
SPICEBrainy Bunch’s proprietary Islamic development frameworkBrainy Bunch — supplementary and enriching above KSPK

Think of it this way: KSPK tells a preschool what it must deliver. SPICE tells Brainy Bunch’s teachers and families what exceptional Islamic holistic development looks like — and how the school organises its curriculum to achieve it.

A Brainy Bunch child receives everything KSPK mandates — and significantly more, through the Spiritual, Creativity, and Emotion pillars that extend beyond KSPK’s minimum requirements in Islamic integration and holistic development.


Other Islamic Curriculum Frameworks in Malaysia

SPICE is not the only proprietary Islamic curriculum framework used by Malaysian Islamic preschool brands. Others include:

BrandFramework NameKey Organising Principle
Brainy BunchSPICE + 7MHolistic Islamic development across 5 pillars; 7 Malay-language capabilities
Little CaliphsTLCP (The Little Caliphs Programme)13 integrated modules including Islamic Leadership for Children
Genius AuladGenius-Balanced MethodologyHere & Hereafter balance; dual Arabic and English academic strands
Bir AliSunnah Learning ModuleHadith and Sunnah as the primary curriculum organiser
Alimkids5AsAqidah, Akhlak & Adab, Academic, Al-Quran, Amal

Source: Brand official websites; ilmify research, March 2026

All of these frameworks are built on top of KSPK, not instead of it. They represent each brand’s answer to “what do we add to the national minimum to deliver a genuinely excellent Islamic education?”


KSPK vs SPICE: A Detailed Comparison

DimensionKSPKSPICE (Brainy Bunch)
TypeNational mandatory standardProprietary Islamic development framework
Set byKPM — Ministry of Education MalaysiaBrainy Bunch International
Applies toAll registered Tadika in MalaysiaBrainy Bunch campuses only
Islamic contentSpiritual, Attitudes & Values strand (minimum)Full Spiritual pillar — aqidah, Iqra’, hafazan, solat, Islamic character
Montessori integrationNot referencedCore — 300+ Montessori apparatus
Physical developmentPhysical Development strandPhysical pillar — outdoor activity, gross motor, prophetic physical practices
Emotional developmentSocial-emotional component within strandsDedicated Emotion pillar — Islamic character, self-regulation
Language coverageBM + English + mother tongueBM + English + Arabic (Iqra’ and Islamic vocabulary)
Curriculum documentationPublished by KPM — publicly availableInternal framework — described on Brainy Bunch website
AssessmentKPM assessment guidelinesProprietary Brainy Bunch assessment alongside KSPK requirements

Source: KPM KSPK 2017; Brainy Bunch official curriculum; ilmify research, March 2026


What This Means When Choosing a Preschool

Understanding the KSPK-SPICE relationship helps parents ask better questions when evaluating any Islamic preschool — not just Brainy Bunch.

Questions to Ask Any Islamic Preschool

QuestionWhat You Are Really Asking
Is your school KPM registered?Is the minimum standard being met?
What Islamic curriculum framework do you use beyond KSPK?What has the school added above the national minimum?
How does your Islamic curriculum map to KSPK strands?Can the school explain what it does and why?
What specific Islamic outcomes do children achieve by Year 2?Do the claims translate into measurable results?
How is KSPK assessment delivered alongside your proprietary framework?Is there accountability to national standards?

What the Presence of a Named Framework Signals

SignalWhat It Means
School has a named, documented Islamic curriculum framework (SPICE, TLCP, 5As, etc.)The school has invested in curriculum design beyond the minimum
School can explain how its framework maps to KSPKThe school understands both national requirements and its own value-add
School has no Islamic curriculum framework beyond KSPKThe school delivers the national minimum — may be adequate; ask about Islamic outcomes
School uses “Islamic” in branding but cannot describe its Islamic curriculumA signal to investigate further before enrolling

Source: ilmify editorial research, March 2026


Conclusion

The KSPK and SPICE frameworks serve different purposes in Malaysia’s Islamic preschool landscape. KSPK is the national regulatory standard that ensures every registered Tadika meets minimum requirements for child development across six strands. SPICE is Brainy Bunch’s answer to the question of what excellent Islamic holistic education looks like above that minimum.

Understanding this distinction — and understanding that all the major Islamic preschool brands have their own equivalent frameworks above the KSPK baseline — helps parents evaluate schools more accurately. The question is not “does this school use SPICE or KSPK?” The question is “what does this school add to the national minimum, and do its Islamic outcomes justify my child’s enrolment?”

For Islamic preschool operators managing curriculum delivery and tracking outcomes against both KSPK and their own frameworks, ilmify.app provides the tools to do so in one integrated system.

👉 See How ilmify Supports Islamic Curriculum Management →


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Frequently Asked Questions

No — SPICE is proprietary to Brainy Bunch International Islamic Montessori. Other Islamic preschool brands have their own frameworks: TLCP (Little Caliphs), Genius-Balanced (Genius Aulad), Sunnah Learning Module (Bir Ali), 5As (Alimkids). All of these are built on top of the mandatory KSPK foundation.

KSPK’s Spiritual, Attitudes & Values strand includes foundational Islamic content for Muslim children — basic aqidah, ibadah introduction, and Islamic character. However, this is a minimum standard designed for all Malaysian Tadika, including those serving non-Muslim children who receive moral education in the same strand. Quality Islamic preschools go significantly beyond this minimum with dedicated Iqra’ programmes, hafazan syllabi, daily solat practice, and deep Islamic character formation.

A school that follows KSPK and adds only the statutory Islamic content — without a deeper Islamic curriculum framework, dedicated Iqra’ programme, or systematic hafazan — is delivering a national curriculum with Islamic Studies as one subject. It is not, in a meaningful sense, an Islamic preschool. The difference matters for families who want deep Islamic formation, not just the national minimum.

Not necessarily — a framework is a means, not an end. What matters is outcomes: does your child advance in Iqra’? Do they memorise surahs? Do they perform solat? Do they grow in Islamic character? Ask for these specific outcomes, observe the Islamic culture of the school during your visit, and talk to current parents. A school without a named framework can deliver excellent Islamic education through teacher commitment and culture — and a school with a beautifully named framework can deliver mediocre Islamic education through poor implementation.

Yes — this is exactly what Brainy Bunch does. SPICE is not an alternative to KSPK; it is a comprehensive Islamic development framework that encompasses and exceeds KSPK requirements. Other Islamic preschool brands do the same thing with their own frameworks. KSPK is the floor; the school’s Islamic curriculum framework is the structure built above it.

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Author

Rahman

Educational expert at Ilmify, dedicated to modernizing Islamic institution management through smart technology and holistic Tarbiyah.