Preschool in Canggu. Ages 0.5–6. Curriculum: Early Years.
Parent perspectives
These anonymized parent perspectives are intended to help families prepare questions for a tour or admissions conversation.
Alam Atelier had a warm, community feel that helped us settle in. Our 3-year-old made friends quickly and came home feeling positive about school.
We chose Alam Atelier for the early years environment. It’s reassuring to have a learning pathway that feels internationally portable if our plans change.
The admin side was refreshingly clear — fees, schedules, and expectations were easy to understand. That kind of transparency mattered to us.
Quick notes
- Early years options from 6 months to 6 years.
- Good fit if you want childcare + preschool in one place.
- Ask about schedules, meals, and drop-off/pick-up.
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In-depth profile
Alam Atelier has a name that almost tells you what it is trying to do. “Alam” points toward nature and the outdoors. “Atelier” points toward a studio—a place where children don’t only do activities, but make things with intention. Put those together and you get a certain kind of early years promise: a childhood that is hands‑on, creative, and a little more grounded than the average “drop‑off and hope for the best” routine.
In Canggu, early childhood options can feel overwhelming because there are many styles living side by side. Some places are very academic early—letters, numbers, worksheets. Some are very free‑flow—lots of play, very little structure. The best schools usually sit somewhere in the middle: play is central, but the day has a rhythm. Children feel safe because they know what happens next.
If you visit Alam Atelier, start by paying attention to materials. Not the pretty photos—real materials in reach of real children. Are there things children can build with? Create with? Sort? Mix? Carry? The physical world is the curriculum in early years. A strong atelier‑style environment makes it easy for children to become makers: cutting, gluing, stacking, drawing, painting, building, rearranging, and trying again.
The next thing to notice is how adults behave around that making. In some schools, adults “run the activity.” Children follow steps. Everyone ends up with the same craft. In a true studio mindset, adults set up an invitation, then watch what children do with it. They guide without taking over. They ask questions that open the room: “What happens if…?” “How could we make it stronger?” “What do you notice?” That language is small, but it’s powerful.
Because Alam Atelier serves very young children through preschool age, ask about the daily rhythm. The rhythm matters more than the “theme of the week.” A good rhythm includes: a warm arrival, enough free play, a shared snack, outdoor time, a short group moment, story, rest (for those who need it), and a calm pick‑up. Children don’t need constant entertainment. They need repeatable days that help them regulate.
Canggu also comes with a reality: traffic and changing schedules. A school that works for your family is not only “best on paper.” It’s the one you can actually get to without turning mornings into a battle. Ask about start times, pick‑up windows, and whether they offer half‑days and full‑days. In early childhood, the schedule is part of the education.
Here are the questions that tend to make an “atelier” school visit more concrete:
- How much of the day is child‑led vs teacher‑led? Both can be good, but you want to know the balance.
- How do you handle messy play? Do they embrace it with systems, or avoid it because it’s inconvenient?
- What happens when a child refuses an activity? In early years, refusal is information.
- How do you support language development? Conversations, stories, songs, and play scripts matter.
- How do you communicate with parents? Consistency beats perfection.
One more thing: ask how they handle conflict. In preschool, conflict is not a problem; it’s practice. A child grabs a toy. Another child shouts. The teacher’s response teaches the real lesson. Do they shame? Do they solve it for kids? Or do they coach: “You can say ‘my turn,’” “You can ask,” “You can wait,” “We can trade.” Coaching builds social skill over time.
Fees in Canggu can vary by schedule and what’s included (materials, snacks, extra programs). So treat the fee range as a conversation starter and ask what it covers. It’s normal to ask about registration fees, materials fees, uniforms, and any extra costs across the year.
Alam Atelier may be a strong fit if you want an early years environment that feels like a studio—where children make, explore, and practice independence—while still having enough structure that the day feels calm.
A good “nature + studio” early years program also pays attention to the outdoors in a practical way. Ask how often children go outside and what “outside” means. Is it just running around for ten minutes, or is it real exploration—watering plants, looking at insects, collecting leaves, playing with sand and water, climbing, balancing. Young children need movement. Movement is not a break from learning; it’s part of it.
You can also ask how the school handles weather and heat. In Bali, the environment changes across the day. The best programs plan around it: active play earlier, calmer activities later, shade and hydration always. These details sound small, but they shape a child’s experience.
Another helpful question is about documentation. Many atelier‑style programs like to document learning—photos of projects, short notes about what children explored, little “stories” of progress. If Alam Atelier does this, ask how they share it. Documentation is not only for parents; it helps teachers notice patterns and plan next steps.
If you’re choosing between several early years options, use this simple comparison: Which school will make your child more capable at home? The best early years programs create “spillover skills.” Children start to tidy up without being asked. They try putting on shoes. They use words for feelings. They carry plates to the sink. These changes are signs the school is teaching independence, not only entertaining.
Before you leave a tour, ask two last questions:
- What does a hard day look like here, and how do you handle it?
- What do children usually love most about this place?
The answers often sound more honest than “What’s your curriculum?” because they reflect the real daily life.
Photos on this page are placeholders. Replace them with school-provided images when available.
Similar schools
FAQ
Curriculum
Early Years
Ages
0.5–6
Fees
Rp 45,000,000–Rp 110,000,000 /year
Type
Preschool
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