School in Ubud. Ages 1–15. Cambridge-based academics with a strong focus on emotional skills and outdoor learning.
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 Empathy School. For our 7-year-old, the first month was smoother than we expected.
We liked the Cambridge track because it felt structured without being rigid. Our 12-year-old stayed engaged, and teacher feedback was clear and practical.
Being based in Ubud made the routine manageable, and the school’s communication was straightforward. The day-to-day felt well organised.
Quick notes
- Cambridge-based academics (check the school level that fits your child).
- Nature learning is built into the week (outdoor time and hands-on projects).
- Animal Area on campus (reported) with gentle animals for daily care routines.
- Daily plant-based lunch and fresh fruit are part of the school’s food approach (reported).
- Fees shown are a rough range — confirm your child’s grade and options with the school.
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 grew up thinking school is mostly about what a child learns, Empathy School quietly shifts the question to who a child becomes while they learn it.
Bali is a funny place to make that shift. The island rewards soft skills every day: reading people, adapting to the unexpected, staying calm when the scooter in front of you suddenly stops. In that sense, “empathy” isn’t a poster on a wall. It’s a practical life skill. This school tries to build that idea into the rhythm of the week, alongside academics that look familiar to many international families.
The quick picture
Empathy School is in the Ubud area and is often described as Cambridge‑based academically, with a strong emphasis on social‑emotional learning and a lot of time outdoors. That combination—structured learning plus human skills—is what tends to pull families in.
If you’re coming from a more traditional system, it can help to picture the academics as the spine and the emotional skills as the muscle. The spine keeps things upright: literacy, numeracy, clear expectations, a sense of progression. The muscle is what makes movement possible: emotional vocabulary, conflict repair, self‑management, and the kind of confidence that doesn’t collapse when a child makes a mistake.
What the day can feel like
One of the big differences between “school in Bali” and “school in a city” is the sensory environment. In Ubud, the edges of campus don’t feel like hard borders. You’ll hear birds. You’ll notice weather. You’ll see kids move more.
That matters, because many children regulate themselves through movement. A child who is “restless” at a desk can be “focused” with the right kind of hands‑on task. If your child learns best through doing, pay attention to how this school uses outdoor time: is it only a break, or is it a real part of learning?
Who this school can fit well
Empathy School often suits families who want:
- A clear academic path (especially if you may move countries later), without a culture of constant pressure.
- Children who are sensitive or socially aware—kids who feel everything and need tools, not shaming.
- A community vibe, where teachers and parents talk to each other like real humans, not like customer service tickets.
- Outdoor learning as more than a marketing photo.
It can also work well for children who are bright but anxious. When emotional skills are treated as a real “subject,” a child gets permission to struggle in public—then recover—and that changes everything.
What to notice on a tour
The best clues usually aren’t in the brochure. They’re in the small moments:
- How do adults respond to conflict? Do they rush to punish, or do they coach repair?
- How is “quiet” achieved? Through fear and compliance, or through routines and choice?
- What happens when a child says “no”? Not as a power play—but as information.
- Do children’s projects look genuinely different, or do they all look like they came from the same template?
Also ask how the school communicates progress. “Empathy first” does not have to mean “vague.” Strong schools can describe a child’s growth in clear language: reading level, number sense, writing development—plus social growth.
The curriculum question (and how to ask it)
Because Empathy School is commonly described as Cambridge‑based, it’s worth asking very specifically:
- Which Cambridge stage is offered for your child’s age?
- How are subjects sequenced across the year?
- How do they assess learning (tests, portfolios, observation)?
- For older students: what is the pathway for recognized transitions?
You’re not being “too intense.” You’re simply making sure the academic backbone is real. A school can be warm and human while still answering these questions clearly.
The hidden benefit: language for feelings
Here’s the thing many parents don’t notice until they see it working: when a child learns precise language for feelings, behavior improves without brute force.
A child who can say, “I’m overwhelmed,” is less likely to hit.
A child who can say, “I need a minute,” is less likely to melt down.
A child who can say, “That embarrassed me,” is less likely to lie.
That’s the practical promise behind the school’s name. You’re not raising a “nice kid.” You’re raising a kid who can navigate real life.
Fees and practicalities
The fee range you see on this page is an estimate unless the school publishes a current fee table. In Bali, what matters as much as the number is what sits inside it: lunches, materials, field trips, uniforms, after‑school activities.
Before you commit, ask:
- What’s included in the fees (and what is billed separately)?
- What are the start/end times? Are there after‑school options?
- How do they handle trial days or a transition period?
- What does parent communication look like—weekly updates, daily notes, WhatsApp?
Finally, do the commute at the time you’ll actually drive it. In Bali, “15 minutes away” can become 45 minutes on a random Tuesday.
Bottom line
If you want a school that treats emotional skill as a real part of education—while still giving your child academic structure—Empathy School is worth a serious look. The best way to understand it is to visit and watch the adults. In a school built on empathy, the adults are the curriculum.
Photos on this page are placeholders. Replace them with school-provided images when available.
Similar schools
FAQ
Curriculum
Cambridge, Montessori, Nature-based, Reggio Emilia, Waldorf
Ages
1–15
Fees
Rp 100,000,000–Rp 160,000,000 /year
Type
School
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