SENSE Garden Kids Center logo

SENSE Garden Kids Center

Fees
Rp 40,000,000–Rp 100,000,000 /yearEstimate
Budget
Mid-range
Type
Preschool
Ages
26.5
Curriculum
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Preschool in Sanur. Ages 2–6.5. Curriculum: Early Years, Play-Based.

Parent perspectives

These anonymized parent perspectives are intended to help families prepare questions for a tour or admissions conversation.

The community at SENSE Garden Kids Center made a big difference for our family. Our 3-year-old found their feet fast, and the transition felt genuinely supported.
Parent from Switzerland · child age 3
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.
Parent from Belgium · child age 4
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.
Parent from France · child age 5

Quick notes

  • Sanur location
  • Early years care
  • Activities and play

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In-depth profile

Some early childhood centers feel like small cities: many rooms, many schedules, lots of motion. Others feel like a garden—spaces that invite you to slow down and notice what a child is actually doing. SENSE Garden Kids Center, by name alone, signals a certain philosophy: learning through the senses, through movement, through real experiences rather than just instruction.

In early childhood education, “sense” is not a cute word. It’s biology. Children learn through their bodies first. They touch, carry, pour, climb, listen, and imitate. Their brains are built on these experiences. When a school understands this, you’ll see it in the materials: things that can be manipulated, sorted, stacked, poured. You’ll see it in the permission to be a little messy. Messy is often the doorway to learning.

SENSE Garden sits in Sanur and focuses on the preschool‑age range. That’s a particularly important stage because it’s where children begin to shift from “I do what I want” to “I can participate.” They practice waiting. They practice sharing. They practice listening to a story all the way through. These skills look simple, but they are the foundation of every future classroom.

If you’re visiting, look for a balance: freedom with boundaries. A good play‑based preschool is not chaotic. It’s structured in a way that children can navigate. There are clear expectations, but the expectations are age‑appropriate. It’s not “be quiet and sit still.” It’s “use kind hands,” “walk inside,” “we clean up together,” “we take turns.”

One of the most telling moments in a preschool is snack time. Snack time is basically a lab: can children sit together, manage their own bodies, practice manners, and communicate needs? Watch how adults handle it. Do they rush? Do they scold? Or do they guide? Guidance is the whole job.

Because SENSE Garden emphasizes sensory learning, ask what “sensory” means in their daily routine. Is it simply messy play once a week? Or is it built into the day—water play, sand, art materials, nature exploration, movement. Ask how they adjust sensory experiences for children who are sensitive (some kids don’t like certain textures or loud noise). A thoughtful center will have options, not pressure.

Sanur’s environment can support this style well. Families often have a bit more space in their routine, and mornings can be calmer. But every family is different. Ask about schedules: half‑day, full‑day, pick‑up times. In early childhood, a schedule that fits your family is part of your child’s success. If you’re constantly late or stressed, your child feels it.

Here are the questions that help a Sanur preschool visit become clear:

  • How do you handle children who don’t want to join group time? Some kids need a gradual invitation.
  • How do you support language? Storytelling, songs, conversations—these matter more than worksheets.
  • What do you do when a child is upset? Comfort is not a weakness. It’s regulation.
  • How do you prepare children for primary school? The best answer includes skills: listening, confidence, independence.
  • How do you partner with parents? Preschool works best when home and school share the same basic approach.

Fees at preschool level often reflect how many days per week, how many hours, and what’s included (snacks, materials, events). If you’re comparing, ask for the full list up front. It saves headaches later.

The best way to think about SENSE Garden is not “Will my child learn ABCs?” The better question is: Will my child become steady, curious, and confident? When those three are in place, the letters come quickly.

If you want a preschool that treats early learning as a real, physical, sensory experience—and you like the idea of childhood that feels like discovery rather than pressure—SENSE Garden Kids Center is worth visiting with open eyes and a calm morning.

Sensory learning has another benefit that parents usually discover by accident: it helps children regulate. A child who has poured water, carried heavy objects, climbed, jumped, and moved often comes back to the group calmer. Their body is satisfied. In that way, sensory play is not only “fun.” It’s emotional support.

If your child is sensitive—easily overwhelmed, picky about textures, anxious in noisy groups—ask how the school adapts. Do they offer quieter spaces? Do they let a child watch first before joining? Do they force participation, or invite it? The answer tells you whether the school is about performance or about development.

And here’s a small hack for evaluating any preschool: ask what happens during clean‑up. Clean‑up time is where routines either break or strengthen. In a strong program, clean‑up is a shared ritual, not a punishment. Children learn responsibility without fear.

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

2–6.5

Fees

Rp 40,000,000–Rp 100,000,000 /year

Type

Preschool

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