She attended school in De Smet, SD, but did not graduate.
No, she did not even finish high school.
Laura was educated to about the maximum extent of most girls back then - she had the 1885 equivalent of a high school education, though she never formally graduated.
No, Laura never attended college. Indeed, she did not quite complete high school, although her last formal teacher, Vidoq (Ven) Owen assured her she had the equivalent of a high school diploma when she married.
She did not quite finish High School.
The name of the school was the Bouchie School. It was renamed for Wilder's story, "These Happy Golden Years". It was 12 miles from Laura's home in De Smet. Almanzo "Manly" Wilder drove her home in his wagon. On one of the sliegh rides, Manly proposed to Laura and they got married sometime later and also had a baby girl named Rose.
She never finished high school although she could have. Her teacher held her and others in the class back so that he could graduate all the same age girls together but she left to get married before she graduated.
just a teaching degree Laura had teaching certificates but never a degree. According to the books she should have graduated with a high school diploma but her teacher wanted all of her same-age classmates to graduate at the same time so he held Laura back. She married Almanzo before the new school year started.
Laura Ingalls Wilder did not like to teach. She taught school at age 15 at Brewster School. Brewster School was located 12 miles west of De Smet, South Dakota. She also wrote books about her life. These books are called The Little House OR Little House On The Prairie books. She continued books about her life that she wrote with her daughter, Rose Wilder Lane who married and divorced Claire Gillette Lane. Laura Ingalls Wilder married Almanzo Wilder who Laura had Rose and an unnamed baby boy who died 12 days after his birth. There is lots of information you can look up. You can visit houses of the Ingalls and Wilder families.
Laura didn't go to high school. She went to school in Walnut Grove Minnesota, Iowa and De Smet South Dakota. At 16 years old she was a teacher and thus left school.
She taught all general school subjects from about first grade to what we'd call "high school sophomore". She was not unusual in this regard - all teachers at that place and time were expected to do that. It was the era of "one room schools".
No, Laura never attended college. Indeed, she did not quite complete high school, although her last formal teacher, Vidoq (Ven) Owen assured her she had the equivalent of a high school diploma when she married.As I understood it; Mr Owen assured her she would indeed have been able to graduate that spring, but he held her back to graduate in the fall with her classmates whom were not so advanced. She has been known to quote "I never even graduated high school".
Leaving out a brief experiment in sending Laura to school while the family lived in Wisconsin (she was simply too young) Laura began her schooling in Walnut Grove, Minnesota. This continued in Burr Oak, Iowa during the year that the Ingalls family lived there, and then she finished her schooling in De Smet, Dakota Territory, eventually leaving school with the equivalent of a high school seniors education. The year Laura finished her formal schooling was 1885.