Taruwara Primary School logo

Taruwara Primary School

Fees
Rp 50,000,000–Rp 120,000,000 /yearEstimate
Budget
Mid-range
Type
School
Ages
612
Curriculum
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School in Sanur. Ages 6–12. Curriculum: International.

Parent perspectives

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

We were new to Sanur, and Taruwara Primary School felt welcoming from the first week. Our 6-year-old settled in quickly and started looking forward to mornings.
Parent from New Zealand · child age 6
The fit with an international-school environment has been great for our child. Lessons felt purposeful, and we noticed more confidence in class discussions.
Parent from United Kingdom · child age 8
The campus setup and routines felt smooth. It helped our 10-year-old feel secure and know what to expect each day.
Parent from Ireland · child age 10

Quick notes

  • Primary level focus
  • Sanur area (reported)

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In-depth profile

Primary school is where the “cute” phase of early learning turns into something more durable. Children stop learning only by imitation and start learning by practice: reading every day, writing paragraphs, solving problems that take time. It’s also where confidence becomes tied to competence. A child who can read well often feels powerful in the world. A child who struggles may start to hide. That’s why choosing a primary school matters.

Taruwara Primary School focuses on the primary years. That focus can be a quiet advantage. Schools that span everything from toddler to teenager can be wonderful, but they also split attention across many stages. A primary‑focused school can specialize in the habits that matter most at ages six to twelve: independence, literacy, numeracy, and the ability to learn in a group.

If you’re visiting Taruwara, look closely at reading. Ask what students read. Not just “Do you teach phonics?” but what is the reading culture? Do children bring books home? Are classrooms filled with real texts? Do teachers talk about stories in a way that makes kids curious? Reading is not only a skill. It’s a relationship with ideas.

Then look at writing. A good primary program treats writing as a daily tool, not an occasional assignment. Children should write stories, explanations, reflections, and simple arguments. Ask: How often do students write? Do they get feedback? Do they revise? Revision is where learning lives.

Taruwara is listed in an international category, which often means English is central. If your child is still building English, ask what support exists. The best support isn’t only “extra English class.” It’s a classroom culture that makes language safe. Children must feel comfortable trying, making mistakes, and trying again.

Another core skill in primary is math. Ask how math is taught. Are students encouraged to explain their thinking? Do they use hands‑on materials when concepts are new? Math anxiety is real, and it often starts in primary when children are rushed past understanding. A good program doesn’t rush.

Sanur can be a supportive environment for primary school because the routine of life can be steadier. But routine only helps if the commute is manageable. Traffic is not just an inconvenience; it’s stress that spills into the day. So ask about start times and pick‑up times, and consider your real daily route.

Here are the questions that make a primary school visit more than a tour:

  • How do you support children who are ahead? Boredom can be as damaging as struggle.
  • How do you support children who are behind? A good plan is specific, not vague.
  • What does homework look like? Some schools use it well; others use it as a habit.
  • How do you handle behavior and conflict? Primary years are where social dynamics intensify.
  • What is the teacher turnover? Stability matters for children.

Because Taruwara is primary‑focused, ask about transitions into secondary. Where do students go next? What pathways are common? A good school has relationships and knowledge, even if it isn’t “one campus.”

Fees in primary school can include more “extra” costs than parents expect—books, uniforms, activities, trips. Get the full list early. It’s not rude. It’s responsible.

One more thing: pay attention to the classroom noise. Not volume—noise. Is it purposeful? Do students talk about learning? Do they ask questions? Do they seem comfortable with teachers? In a good primary classroom, you can feel the mix of challenge and safety.

Taruwara Primary School is worth exploring if you want a Sanur‑based program that takes the primary years seriously—building strong foundations in reading, writing, math, and the confidence that comes from doing hard things well.

Primary school is also where friendship becomes more complex. Children form groups. They test social power. They learn the difference between “a friend” and “a classmate.” Ask how the school actively teaches social skills and conflict resolution. The best schools don’t wait for a problem. They teach respect as a habit.

Ask, too, about the non‑academic parts that keep students engaged: art, music, sports, field trips, and hands‑on projects. These subjects are not “extra.” They are often where a child discovers competence and confidence—especially children who don’t shine on paper at first.

If you can, request to see examples of student work. Real notebooks. Real writing samples. Real project displays. It’s one of the fastest ways to understand whether learning is happening deeply or only described broadly.

Parents sometimes focus on curriculum labels and forget the most important factor: the teacher in front of the class. Ask about teacher training and stability. Ask how the school supports teachers to keep improving. Great teachers don’t just “arrive.” They are built and supported.

You can also ask how the school handles parent involvement. Some families want lots of events; others prefer quiet routines. A good school sets clear expectations so no one feels guilty or confused. Clarity reduces stress for everyone.

Photos on this page are placeholders. Replace them with school-provided images when available.

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Area comparisons

FAQ

Curriculum

International

Ages

6–12

Fees

Rp 50,000,000–Rp 120,000,000 /year

Type

School

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