The Anak Atelier Early Learning Centre
Preschool in Bukit Region. Ages 1.25–6. Curriculum: Early Years, Play-Based.
Parent perspectives
These anonymized parent perspectives are intended to help families prepare questions for a tour or admissions conversation.
We were new to Bukit Region, and The Anak Atelier Early Learning Centre felt welcoming from the first week. Our 3-year-old settled in quickly and started looking forward to mornings.
We liked a gentle play-based setting 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
- Early years focus
- Creative play and exploration
- Bukit area
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
- The “island child” idea
- Who it tends to suit
- Fees: think in real-life terms
- A tour is not about the facilities — it’s about the adults
- The early years skill that changes everything
- The Bukit routine advantage
- What to ask before enrolling
- A final scene
- Programs and enrichment: ask what your child will actually do
- Culture without forcing
Some schools feel like buildings. The rooms are tidy, the walls are painted, the schedule is pinned to a board.
The Anak Atelier feels more like a place.
Not in the vague “Bali vibe” way. In a specific way: a lush, tropical early learning environment where the outdoors isn’t an extra — it’s part of how children learn to move, explore, and make sense of the world.
Located in the Bukit region (Ungasan / Balangan area), The Anak Atelier is designed for young children — roughly 15 months to 6 years — and it welcomes both resident families and families who are in Bali for a season.
The “island child” idea
The Anak Atelier talks about giving children an “island child” experience. That can sound poetic, but it points to something practical:
Early childhood is sensory. Children learn through:
- texture
- movement
- light and sound
- repetition
- nature and play
- relationships with adults who feel safe
A tropical learning space, with room to move and explore, can support that kind of learning beautifully — when it’s paired with steady adult guidance.
Who it tends to suit
The Anak Atelier can be a strong fit for:
- families living in the Bukit who want early years care close to home
- parents who value outdoor play, art, and exploration as serious learning
- children who are active, curious, and learn best through doing
- short-stay families who need a meaningful routine while in Bali
It may be less ideal for:
- families needing primary schooling (older than early years)
- children who need a very quiet, low-stimulation environment (depending on the day and group)
- parents who want a very traditional, academic-prep early years program
Fees: think in real-life terms
The fee range shown on our site is Rp 45,000,000–Rp 110,000,000 /year (annual, IDR estimate). Early learning centres often price in ways that match family reality: by week, by month, or by term, with different options for half-days and full-days.
So ask:
- What are the available schedules (half day vs full day)?
- What is the minimum enrolment period?
- What is included (materials, snacks, special classes)?
- Are there extra fees for holiday programs or camps?
If you’re a visiting family, also ask about short-term enrolment options. Many Bukit families rotate between “in Bali” and “travelling again,” and a centre that understands this can be very helpful.
A tour is not about the facilities — it’s about the adults
Parents often get distracted by the environment: the pretty space, the toys, the climbing structures, the aesthetic.
Those things matter. But the most important part of any early learning centre is the adults.
While you tour, look for:
- teachers who speak calmly
- adults who get down to child level
- gentle boundaries enforced consistently
- warmth without chaos
Then watch one small moment: what happens when a child cries?
If the response is patient, confident, and kind — not rushed, not irritated — that’s a strong sign.
The early years skill that changes everything
In early childhood, one skill predicts long-term success more than “early reading”:
self-regulation.
This is the child’s ability to:
- calm down after upset
- wait a turn
- transition between activities
- cope with frustration
- follow a simple routine
A great early learning centre builds self-regulation through daily life:
- predictable rhythms
- clear routines
- respectful language
- teaching children what to do with big feelings
Ask The Anak Atelier how they approach this. The answer will tell you what kind of culture your child will grow up inside.
The Bukit routine advantage
If you live in Ungasan, Pecatu, Jimbaran, or nearby, a local early learning centre is a gift. It means:
- shorter drives
- less morning stress
- more time for family life
- a child who arrives at school with energy, not exhaustion
This matters more than people admit. Young children feel the stress of traffic. They may not have words for it, but their bodies carry it.
What to ask before enrolling
A few questions that protect you from surprises:
- What is your approach to toilet training support?
- How do you handle biting/hitting (common in toddler stages)?
- What happens if my child is shy and doesn’t join group activities?
- How do you communicate with parents (daily notes, photos, apps)?
- What is your illness policy?
A good centre will answer these without judgment. They’ve heard it all.
A final scene
Picture your child arriving in the morning. Not the “best day” — the normal day.
They walk in, they recognise a teacher, they move toward something interesting, and they settle.
That settling is the whole goal. It’s not about turning your toddler into an early achiever. It’s about building safety, confidence, and the kind of curiosity that becomes learning later.
If The Anak Atelier feels like a place where your child would settle — and if it fits your Bukit routine — it’s worth a serious look.
Programs and enrichment: ask what your child will actually do
The Anak Atelier typically runs stages that match early childhood development — toddler, preschool, and kindergarten/prep style programs. But the exact daily mix can change with the group and the season.
When you visit, ask for a simple outline:
- What does a normal morning look like?
- How much time is indoors vs outdoors?
- What kinds of activities are offered each week?
Many Bali early learning centres add gentle enrichment like music and movement, simple yoga, gardening, art, drama play, or Bahasa Indonesia exposure. These add-ons are not “extra.” For young children, they are how language, coordination, and confidence grow.
The key is balance: enough variety to stay curious, and enough routine to feel safe.
Culture without forcing
For international families, “local culture” can sometimes feel like a performance. The better version is quieter: children learning respect, language, and daily rhythms naturally — through teachers, celebrations, and the way adults speak about the world.
Ask how The Anak Atelier brings Bali and Indonesia into the learning in a way that feels normal and kind, not staged. If the answer sounds grounded, it’s usually a good sign.
Photos on this page are placeholders. Replace them with school-provided images when available.
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FAQ
Curriculum
Early Years, Play-Based
Ages
1.25–6
Fees
Rp 45,000,000–Rp 110,000,000 /year
Type
Preschool
Address
Jln Pantai Balangan, Ungasan 80361, Bali, Indonesia
Map link: Google Maps
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