Our story

Why we built this

A note from the parents building StudyLah, for any parent in the middle of the same thing.

We’ve watched the PSLE grind up close, and it nearly broke us.

We hired private tutors. We signed the kids up for group tuition. We bought stacks of top-school papers. Every weekend vanished into marking, correcting, and reviewing. We nagged the kids to revise, they pushed back, and some weekends ended in shouting. The whole family was worn out, and the worst part was that we still couldn’t tell if any of it was actually working.

We’ve still got a child with PSLE ahead of us, and we did not want to go through it the same way again. So we started building on weekends, after the kids were asleep, around a few questions we kept coming back to.

What if PSLE practice felt like something a child would pick over the assessment book?

What if every question built on the last one?

What if a parent could finally see whether their child was improving, instead of just grinding?

That became StudyLah. We’re parents who got tired of the treadmill and figured it did not have to be the only way. The goal is simple: make PSLE practice something your child will actually open, and give your family back a few of its weekends.

Really, we’re building it for the version of us from a few years ago, standing in the bookshop in front of a wall of assessment books, trying to work out which one would actually help. The answer should be cleaner than “buy three and try them all.”

That is roughly what we’re aiming for: clearer than the bookshop wall, more useful than a worksheet PDF, and gentler on the family than the marking grind.

We won’t pretend to be more than we are. We’re early. We don’t have a long track record or thousands of testimonials, and we’re not going to invent them. We’re just parents who lived this, building the thing we wish we’d had, and we’ll keep improving it for as long as families find it useful.

So if any of this sounds like a term you’ve had, the best next step isn’t more reading from us. It’s letting your child try it.

The free plan is real practice, with no cost and no pressure. If you ever decide to support what comes next, that’s entirely up to you.

The StudyLah teamMade in Singapore
P.S.

Curious where the otter came from? Meet Lah →

PSLE ready, lah.

A calmer way through PSLE.

Practice your child will actually open, and a few weekends back for the family. The free plan is real practice, no cost and no pressure.