Caterpillar School Bali is a play- and nature-based early learning centre near Umalas/Canggu, blending Finnish early childhood influences with British curriculum elements.
Parent perspectives
These anonymized parent perspectives are intended to help families prepare questions for a tour or admissions conversation.
What stood out early was the calm, friendly atmosphere at Caterpillar School Bali. For our 5-year-old, the first month was smoother than we expected.
The fit with a play-based early years approach has been great for our child. Lessons felt purposeful, and we noticed more confidence in class discussions.
The admin side was refreshingly clear — fees, schedules, and expectations were easy to understand. That kind of transparency mattered to us.
Quick notes
- Play-based and nature-based early learning.
- Finnish early childhood influences plus British curriculum elements.
- Ages roughly 1.5–8 (confirm current groups).
Recommended guides
View all guidesHow to Choose a School in Bali
School Fees in Bali: How to Compare Total First‑Year Cost
Admissions in Bali: Timeline, Documents, and What Happens Next
In-depth profile
If you want to understand early childhood education, watch a two‑year‑old with a bucket.
They pick it up. They fill it. They dump it. They repeat the experiment a hundred times with a seriousness that looks almost scientific. Nobody has to motivate them. Curiosity is already built in.
The best early years schools don’t try to replace that curiosity with “lessons.” They build a structure that protects it—and gently shapes it into skills.
Caterpillar School Bali leans strongly into that philosophy.
The quick picture
Caterpillar School Bali is an early learning centre on the Canggu/Umalas side, typically serving children roughly from toddler age up to early primary (around 1.5–8 years).
In their public materials, they emphasize:
- play‑based learning,
- nature‑based activities,
- and a curriculum blend that includes elements commonly associated with Finnish early childhood education alongside a British curriculum influence.
That’s an unusual mix—but it makes sense. Finnish early years is famous for calmness, outdoor time, and child development. British frameworks tend to be strong on clear progression and foundational academics. Put together well, the result can be both warm and structured.
Why “play-based” is not a soft option
Some parents worry that play‑based learning means “no academics.”
It’s the opposite.
Play is how young children practice:
- language,
- social negotiation,
- attention,
- problem‑solving,
- impulse control,
- creativity,
- and resilience.
These are not cute extras. They are the operating system.
A child who can focus, listen, take turns, and recover after a mistake will learn academics faster later. A child who is forced into academics before their emotional system is ready can learn the content—but hate the process.
So the real question is not “Do they do academics?” The real question is: Do they build the skills that make academics possible?
What the day can feel like
In a strong early learning environment, you usually feel three things:
- Safety
- Rhythm
- Movement
Safety: children know the adults and trust them.
Rhythm: the day has predictable patterns—arrival, play, snack, outdoor time, stories, rest, projects—so children can relax inside the structure.
Movement: young children need to move to regulate themselves. Outdoor time isn’t a luxury in Bali; it’s sanity.
Caterpillar’s messaging around nature‑based activities suggests they take this seriously. When a school uses the outdoors as part of learning, children often become calmer. They also become braver. The outdoors teaches risk assessment in a gentle way: balance, climbing, attention, confidence.
The curriculum blend (Finnish + British)
Curriculum language can be confusing, especially in early years.
What matters in practice is:
- How do they support language development?
- How do they build early literacy and numeracy without pressure?
- How do they guide social learning?
- How do they handle big emotions?
A Finnish‑influenced early years approach often emphasizes wellbeing and development first. A British‑influenced approach often emphasizes clear learning goals. Together, it can create a school where children feel free—but not lost.
When you visit, ask for examples:
- How do they document children’s learning?
- How do they communicate progress to parents?
- How do they support children who are shy, or highly sensitive, or very energetic?
Who Caterpillar tends to suit
Caterpillar can be a good fit for families who want:
- a gentle, warm early learning environment,
- lots of outdoor time and hands‑on activities,
- and a foundation that can transition later into more formal schooling.
It can also suit children who need a calmer pace—kids who get overwhelmed easily, or kids who thrive when adults respond with patience instead of pressure.
What to ask (so you don’t guess)
Because early learning centres can feel “sweet” on the surface, ask questions that reveal the systems underneath:
-
Separation support How do they help new children who cry at drop‑off? What does support look like in week one?
-
Toilet learning What is their approach? Do they require children to be toilet trained? How do they support families?
-
Outdoor policy How much time outside each day? What happens during heavy rain?
-
Teacher stability How long have teachers been with the centre? Early years thrives on consistency.
-
Transition to primary If your child stays through age 6–8, how do they prepare them for the next stage?
A final thought
In Bali, many families think of early years as “temporary”—a place to keep children happy while parents work.
But early years is not babysitting. It’s the foundation of how a child experiences learning for the next decade.
If you want your child to associate school with safety, curiosity, and confidence, Caterpillar School Bali is the type of early years environment worth exploring carefully—because it is built around the way young children actually learn, not the way adults wish they learned.
Photos on this page are placeholders. Replace them with school-provided images when available.
FAQ
Curriculum
Early Years, Play-Based
Ages
1.25–8
Fees
Rp 60,000,000–Rp 150,000,000 /year
Type
School
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