Childcare in Sanur. Ages 1–6. Curriculum: Early Years.
Parent perspectives
These anonymized parent perspectives are intended to help families prepare questions for a tour or admissions conversation.
Skoebi-do Child Care Sanur 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 liked the early years environment because it felt structured without being rigid. Our 4-year-old stayed engaged, and teacher feedback was clear and practical.
We appreciated the balance between learning and outdoor time. Our 5-year-old came home in a good mood, and the environment felt safe and cared for.
Quick notes
- Childcare and early years
- Sanur area
- Local-friendly option
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In-depth profile
Childcare is one of the most underestimated “infrastructure” decisions a family makes. When it works, you barely notice it—your days flow, your work is possible, your child is content. When it doesn’t work, everything else becomes harder. Skoebi-do Child Care Sanur sits in that practical category: early years care that families rely on.
It helps to be honest about what you’re looking for. Some parents want an early years school that feels like a learning atelier—projects, themes, curated materials. Others want something more basic and more valuable: reliable care in a safe, kind environment. There’s no shame in that. In fact, it’s often the most rational choice, especially for working parents or families building a new life in Bali.
Skoebi-do operates in both Canggu and Sanur, which suggests a system that has been repeated—same concept, different place. Repetition can be a strength in childcare because it often means routines and training are standardized. The best childcare centers are not inventing the wheel every morning. They are executing the basics well: greetings, clean spaces, food, naps, play, supervision, communication.
If you visit, look at the transitions. How do children move from play to snack? From inside to outside? From activity to rest? Transitions are where chaos usually happens. If transitions are smooth, it’s a sign the staff know what they’re doing.
Also look at the adult‑to‑child ratio. You don’t need the exact number to start; you can feel it. Are adults rushed? Are they constantly putting out fires? Or do they have enough capacity to speak gently, to notice moods, to kneel and help a child solve a problem? Capacity is the hidden ingredient.
Because Skoebi-do serves young children, naps and rest matter. Ask what rest looks like. Is it truly restful? Do children have a predictable routine? Are there quiet options for children who no longer nap but still need a reset? In Bali’s heat, rest is not optional. It’s regulation.
Sanur families often choose a calm routine, and a childcare center can support that if it’s well‑organized. Ask about pick‑up windows, late policies, and how they handle sudden changes. Real life is messy: a meeting runs late, a scooter won’t start, a child wakes up with a fever. A good center has clear policies that don’t feel punitive.
Here are a few practical questions to ask at any childcare center, including Skoebi-do:
- How do you handle illness? Clear policies protect everyone.
- How do you communicate during the day? Photos, messages, daily reports—what’s the norm?
- What does a normal day look like? Ask for the rhythm, not just activities.
- How do you handle behavior like hitting or biting? Calm, consistent responses matter.
- What do children eat and drink? Food is part of the day’s stability.
Many families underestimate how emotionally important childcare is. It’s not only supervision. It’s the first “social world” a child experiences without parents. It’s where they practice sharing attention, waiting, using words, and trusting other adults. A good childcare center makes that world feel safe.
Fees at childcare level vary with schedule and inclusions. If you’re comparing centers, ask for the full fee structure: registration, monthly/term payments, food, materials, and any extras. A transparent center will lay it out clearly.
If you want a Sanur‑based early years option that is practical, consistent, and built around the daily reality of families, Skoebi-do Child Care Sanur is worth a visit. The best childcare doesn’t feel like a performance. It feels like a steady hand.
Childcare quality also shows up in the boring things: hygiene, organization, and communication. Ask how they handle hand‑washing, diapering, and food safety. Ask what they do when a child has an accident. Ask how often toys and surfaces are cleaned. These questions are not “paranoid.” They are how you learn whether a center is professional.
You can also ask about staff stability. Children attach to caregivers. If caregivers change constantly, children can feel unsettled. A center that invests in staff and keeps them tends to feel calmer over time.
If your family is new to childcare, expect an adjustment period. Even confident children can have a few hard days at first. The best centers normalize this. They don’t shame parents for lingering at the door. They guide families through it like it’s part of the process—because it is.
One more small idea: ask about a trial day. Even a short trial can teach you what a tour cannot. How does your child react when you leave? Do they settle? Do they feel seen? Do they come home hungry, tired, and content—the healthy kind of tired? A trial turns opinions into evidence.
And remember that daycare is not “less than” school. For very young children, daycare is where they learn the basics of being human in a group: waiting, asking, coping, repairing, and trusting adults who aren’t family. Those are big lessons.
Photos on this page are placeholders. Replace them with school-provided images when available.
Areas families also consider
These areas appear often among similar schools. Use them as quick shortcuts while you’re shortlisting.
FAQ
Curriculum
Early Years
Ages
1–6
Fees
Rp 35,000,000–Rp 85,000,000 /year
Type
Childcare
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