Problem: Article: If you want to protect the delicately drawn foot area or just add some extra decoration, a base is a great option. Draw a half-circle shape around the doll’s ankle and feet, with the flat side of the half-circle along the bottom. You can leave the base white or customize it with coloring materials and stickers.  You can also write the doll's name on the base. When you cut out the doll, make sure to cut around the legs and the base, not around the feet or between the legs. To seal your doll’s features and protect from wear and tear, you can put the full sheet with the finished drawing through a laminator or cover the front with a sheet of transparent contact paper.  If you don’t have a laminator, you can have this done at an office supply store. Paper dolls can take a lot of wear and tear, so a plastic lining will help make the doll last much longer. With contact paper, you only need enough to cover the drawing, so you could cut down the transparent sheet to a smaller rectangle. Use that to cover the area with the drawing on both sides. Make sure to use self-adhesive contact paper for easy attachment. Use a pair of scissors that can make small, precise cuts to cut out the paper doll. Cut as close to the lines as you can without cutting over them. Be careful around smaller, delicate areas such as the hands, base, or feet. Young children should use safety scissors for cutting. Cutting out individual fingers and toes will make these areas likely to be damaged or torn. Instead, cut around any individually drawn fingers or toes, making a general hand or foot shape. A base will also take care of this problem for the feet. To make your doll stand up on its own, cut a separate strip of cardstock to 3 to 5 inches (7.6 to 12.7 cm) wide and about half the doll’s height. Leave one side flat and cut the other side into a curve. Fold the flat side inward 1⁄4 inch (0.64 cm) to use as a tab and attach that to the back of the doll with glue or double-sided tape.  Your doll will need a base for the stand to work properly. For the stand to work, the doll must be made with cardstock. If it’s printed or drawn on printer paper, it will be too flimsy to stand up. If your printable template comes with matching clothes, such as the template at the top of the page, print and cut these out for some ready-made clothing. Add color and details if needed, then cut the shape out.  It’s harder to find printable clothes that match a hand-drawn doll or a printable template from a different source. Clothes generally need to be traced exactly from the original doll. However, sometimes looser, larger clothes such as sweaters, dresses, or capes may match up more easily to a hand-drawn doll’s limbs. Be creative with colors, patterns, and embellishments! You can use stickers, colored pencils, markers, paint, crayons, and scrapbooking paper to make unique, customized clothes for your doll. Trace around the doll’s body on a piece of paper and fill in that outline to make a piece of clothing. Color and add embellishments and patterns to personalize the clothes and express your creativity. Add tabs on the sides, then cut out the shape. Instead of tabs, you could also just cut out the clothing and use a slightly tacky adhesive. Materials like putty, the back of a Post-It note glued to the clothing, or washi tape will provide just enough stickiness. This way, the clothes can easily be removed from or attached to the doll’s laminate/contact paper coating.
Summary: Draw a base for your doll. Laminate or line your drawing with contact paper. Cut out the doll with scissors. Create a stand for your doll. Print out some clothes that go with your template. Design and make some clothes for your doll.

Problem: Article: It'll look like one of those knotted  friendship bracelets, but match each color to a letter and you'll be all set.  For example if A: Green, B: Yellow, and C: Pink if the answers were B, C, A, A, B then it would go yellow, pink, green, green, yellow. This method works for multiple choice tests only.
Summary: If you manage to get your hands on an answer sheet before the test, make yourself a bracelet with different colors of string.

Problem: Article: Trading for Mew is the only legitimate way to obtain a Mew in FireRed anymore. Mew is an Event Pokémon, and was only available during a single event in 2006. There is a glitch that people claim will work to find Mew, but this only works in the original Pokémon games. It does not work in Fire Red. Mew is exceedingly rare, and your friend won't likely give it up easily. You'll need to sweeten the pot, so ensure that you have a good selection and be prepared to part with multiple top-tier Pokémon to get it.  Any of the Legendaries make for good trade stock. This includes Articuno, Zapdos, Moltres, Raikou, Entei, and Suicune. Also, if you have some of the event Legendaries, such as Lugia and Ho-oh, these will make your trade much easier. Mewtwo will most likely need to be traded in order for your Mew trade to happen.  EV-train your trade stock. A group of Pokémon that have been expertly EV-trained will command a much better trade value than freshly-caught Pokémon. Invest some time to build up your team before you start the trade. When you've finally convinced your friend to make the trade, connect your systems and get it done! Walk away knowing that you have one of the rarest Pokémon in the game, and that you got it legitimately.
Summary:
Find a friend with Mew. Build up good trade stock. Make the trade.