A first-grade teacher, Ms. Green, was having trouble with one of her students.
The teacher asked, “Rodney, what's your problem?”
Rodney answered, “I'm too smart for the 1st grade. My sister is in the 3rd grade and I'm smarter than she is! I think I should be in the 3rd grade too!”
Ms. Green had had enough. She took Rodney to the principal's office. While Rodney waited in the outer office, the teacher explained to the principal what the situation was. The principal told Ms. Green he would give the boy a test. If he failed to answer any of his questions he was to go back to the 1st grade and behave. She agreed.
Rodney was brought in and the conditions were explained to him and he agreed to take the test.
Principal: “What is 3 x 3?”
Rodney: “9”.
Principal: “What is 6 x 6?”
Rodney: “36”.
And so it went with every question the principal thought a 3rd grader should know.
The principal looks at Ms. Green and tells her, “I think Rodney can go to the 3rd grade.”
Ms. Green says to the principal, “Let me ask him some questions.” The principal and Rodney both agreed.
Ms. Green asks, “What does a cow have four of that I have only two of?”
Rodney, after a moment: “Legs.”
Ms. Green: “What is in your pants that you have but I do not have?”
The principal wondered, why would she ask such a question!
Rodney replied: “Pockets.”
Ms. Green: What's starts with a C, ends with a T, is hairy, oval, delicious and contains thin, whitish liquid?
Rodney: “Coconut.”
The principal sat forward with his mouth hanging open.
Ms. Green: “What does a dog do that a man steps into?”
Rodney: “Pants”
Ms. Green: “What goes in hard and pink then comes out soft and sticky?”
The principal's eyes opened really wide and before he could stop the answer.
Rodney: “Bubble gum”
Ms. Green: “What word starts with an 'F' and ends in 'K' that means a lot of heat and excitement?”
Rodney: “Firetruck”
The principal was trembling.
Ms. Green: “What does a man do standing up, a woman does sitting down and a dog does on three legs?”
Rodney: “Shake hands.”
The principal breathed a sigh of relief and told the teacher, “Put Rodney in the fifth-grade, I got the last seven questions wrong!”