You got to give them at least half credit.

Greetings and welcome to this post.

Happy to have you here.

Worksheet showing a thermometer marked from 0°C to 30°C. Instructions: "Draw an arrow to each temperature on the thermometer." Temperatures: 10°C, 17°C, 29°C

Stay a while, c’mon.

What follows are a bunch of super-clever test answers that I just think you might enjoy.

A worksheet showing a question prompt, "Write a question, using why." An answer is written, "Why?" Below is a meme with Thor captioned "Good question."

Worksheet question about equal sandwich shares. A child's response: "NO because the ends are curved, and the midl is not!"

Math puzzle with 3x3 grid, numbers replaced by blank circles. Text reads, "Make up your own. The sum of every row, column, and diagonal is ________."

A handwritten answer to a worksheet question about deforestation says, "this paper," with a red checkmark indicating it is correct

An English quiz paper shows a student's humorous answer to the question "Describe what is meant by 'forgetting.'" The student wrote, "I can't remember," with a red checkmark

An incorrect homework assignment shows words in alphabetical order next to images from "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" with a humorous caption: "He a little confused, but he got the spirit."

A multiple-choice question screen asking for the chemical formula of nitrogen monoxide, showing the answer "NO" labeled as correct

Worksheet prompt: List three commonalities between Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Answers: 1. All are planets, 2. All are round, 3. None have McDonald's

A test prep question asks for the best estimate of a football's length. Options: 1 foot, 4 feet, 5 feet, 8 feet. "1 football" is handwritten next to the question

Test paper with initials JTH. The question asks to provide an example of a risk. The response given is: "No."

Page with four fill-in-the-blank questions comparing the lengths of eraser, broom, key, and nail to beads, straws, pins, and screws respectively

A math question asks which child has more money, Bobby with four dimes or Amy with 30 pennies. A child answered "Bobby" with a drawing of a thinking face

A homework assignment that prompts to write five words you can spell, answered with "five," "words," "you," "can," and "spell." Teacher's comment: "very clever! +2."

A humorous physics test answer drawing a car transforming into a robot, mimicking the popular "Transformers" series. Question asks to describe how a transformer works

A meme with a test question asking who didn't support Washington’s army, answered with "Godzilla," and commentary about a history teacher awarding partial credit for such answers

A cookie recipe needs 1 cup of butter, but Sarah only has 1/2 cup. The question asks how Sarah can still make cookies without getting more butter. Written answer: "steal."

Part of an English language test with multiple-choice questions, showing answers marked with check and cross symbols

A worksheet shows an incorrectly drawn analog clock. It should show 10 minutes past 11, depicted as 11:10 on a digital clock

A handwritten response urges the reader to "GO ANSWER! GO!!" An edited image below features a distorted version of Mario with the text "IQ" above him

Top part: Class test question asking to circle the smallest number; all three attempts are incorrect. Bottom part: Meme captioned "He's technically correct" next to an unidentified man's image

A piece of paper instructs to "Write 80-100 words." Someone wrote "80-100 words" in response. A pencil rests beside the paper. Text above reads, "This person deserves a scholarship."

Question 2 text asks for the total number of stamps Kevin has, given 9 stamps with boat images are 30% of the total collection. Answer provided is "too many."

A worksheet titled "Words of the week" with words ending in "uck" handwritten: truck, luck, buck, duck, truck, muck, f***, yuck, stuck

A math problem asking to find the angle of a 180-degree line, with a meme below showing a character from Emperor's New Groove saying, "No, no, he's got a point."

Worksheet titled "Geometry: Shape" with names for 2D shapes: circle (Sophia), ellipse (Charlotte), rectangle (Charlie), square (Jade), octagon (Maria), triangle (Emily), and hexagon (Harriet)

Figuring Out Taxes Worksheet with handwritten answer to "Why do we pay taxes?" stating "So we don't get arrested."

Math worksheet with problems asking to write numbers with specific digits in specific places. Answers provided are 111, 666, 222, and 333

Screenshot of an educational question asking "What is | -6 |?" with a text box below for the answer and a link that says "Stuck? Watch a video."

A handwritten answer to a question about what ended in 1896, incorrectly stating "1895"

Math worksheet showing the question "Circle the smallest number" with numbers 3 and 10. There's a circle around 10. Below, a child drew a rainbow to explain their choice

A worksheet titled "Daily Word Problems" features a cartoon of a strong child and a math problem about how much more Marcus, a second grader, can lift now compared to before. A handwritten note at the bottom says, "Marcus is on steroids."

A hand holding a paper with an exercise on categorizing names into Loyalist, Undecided, or Patriot. A handwritten note reads, "Jackie, you can’t just white out a question you don’t want to answer." An arrow points to the whiteout