The students and me / I / we saw dinosaur fossils at the museum

Since "the students and I" is the subject, you need the subject form of the pronoun. Think about it this way. If you got rid of "the students," would you say

me saw dinosaur bones
or
I saw dinosaur bones

The correct sentence is
The students and I saw dinosaur bones at the museum.

Note that "we" is not used.

Well, that sounds like a fantastic adventure! If you're talking about a group of students and yourself, you could say, "The students and I rocked the museum and unleashed our inner paleontologists as we marveled at dinosaur fossils." Just remember, those fossils are from a time when dinosaurs roamed the Earth, not the classroom!

The correct pronoun to use in this sentence is "We."

The sentence should be: "We saw dinosaur fossils at the museum."

To determine the correct pronoun to use in this sentence, we need to understand the subject and object pronouns.

Subject pronouns are used when the pronoun is acting as the subject of the sentence, while object pronouns are used when the pronoun is acting as the object of the sentence.

In this sentence, the subject is "the students and I" or "we" since they are the ones who saw the dinosaur fossils. However, the correct pronoun to use depends on whether "the students" are included in the subject.

If "the students and I" or "we" are the only ones who saw the dinosaur fossils, then the correct pronoun to use is "We." This is because "we" is a subject pronoun and it corresponds to the subject of the sentence.

If "the students" are separate from the speaker ("me"), then the correct pronoun to use is "I." This is because "I" is also a subject pronoun and it corresponds to the subject of the sentence.

To determine which pronoun is correct, we need to clarify if "me/I/we" includes or excludes "the students" in the sentence.