Questões de Concurso Público Prefeitura de Guaraciaba - SC 2020 para Professor - Inglês

Foram encontradas 18 questões

Q1735054 Inglês
As orientações didáticas para a compreensão escrita do Inglês podem envolver o trabalho em fases que podem ser chamadas de pré-leitura, leitura e pós-leitura. A este respeito, analise as tabelas a seguir:

TABELA 1 I. Atividades destinadas a levar os alunos a pensar sobre o texto, emitir suas reações e avaliar, criticamente, as ideias do autor.
II. Ativar o pré-conhecimento do aluno em relação à organização textual.
 III. São importantes as estratégias de integração de uma informação a outra, o estabelecimento dos elos coesivos e a utilização de estratégias de inferência.

TABELA 2
A. Pré-leitura
B. Leitura
C. Pós-leitura.

Relacione as duas tabelas acima e assinale a alternativa que contém a sequência correta, respectivamente:
Alternativas
Q1735055 Pedagogia
A psicologia histórico-cultural é a denominação dada à escola psicológica fundada por
Alternativas
Q1735056 Pedagogia
Ensinar inglês dentro de uma proposta formativa tem, para o currículo, implicações importantes. Dentre elas: I. Obriga a rever as relações entre língua, território e cultura, na medida em que os falantes de inglês já não se encontram apenas nos países em que essa é a língua oficial. II. Amplia a visão de letramento concebida também nas práticas sociais do mundo digital que aproximam e entrelaçam diferentes semioses e linguagens. III. Compreende que determinadas crenças, como a de que há um “inglês melhor” para se ensinar, ou um “nível de proficiência” específico a ser alcançado pelo aluno, precisam ser relativizadas, o que exige uma atitude de acolhimento e legitimação de diferentes formas de expressão do idioma. Está correto o que se afirma em:
Alternativas
Q1735057 Inglês
Read the text below to answer the following question

Even the deepest, coldest parts of the ocean are getting warmer

    Thermometers moored at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean recorded an average temperature increase of about 0.02 degrees Celsius over the last decade. That warming may be a consequence of human-driven climate change, which has boosted ocean temperatures near the surface, but it’s unclear since so little is known about the deepest, darkest parts of the ocean.
    “The deep ocean, below about 2,000 meters, is not very well observed,” says Chris Meinen, an oceanographer at the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The deep sea is so hard to reach that the temperature at any given research site is typically taken only once per decade. But Meinen’s team measured temperatures hourly from 2009 to 2019 using seafloor sensors at four spots in the Argentine Basin, off the coast of Uruguay.
    Temperature records for the two deepest spots revealed a clear trend of warming over that decade. This warming is much weaker than in the upper ocean, Meinen says, but he also notes that since warm water rises, it would take a lot of heat to generate even this little bit of warming so deep.
    It’s too soon to judge whether human activity or natural variation is the cause, Meinen says. Continuing to monitor these sites and comparing the records with data from devices in other ocean basins may help to clarify matters.
(Adapted from: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/ocean-warming-deepest-coldest-temperature).
According to the text:
Alternativas
Q1735058 Inglês
Read the text below to answer the following question

Even the deepest, coldest parts of the ocean are getting warmer

    Thermometers moored at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean recorded an average temperature increase of about 0.02 degrees Celsius over the last decade. That warming may be a consequence of human-driven climate change, which has boosted ocean temperatures near the surface, but it’s unclear since so little is known about the deepest, darkest parts of the ocean.
    “The deep ocean, below about 2,000 meters, is not very well observed,” says Chris Meinen, an oceanographer at the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The deep sea is so hard to reach that the temperature at any given research site is typically taken only once per decade. But Meinen’s team measured temperatures hourly from 2009 to 2019 using seafloor sensors at four spots in the Argentine Basin, off the coast of Uruguay.
    Temperature records for the two deepest spots revealed a clear trend of warming over that decade. This warming is much weaker than in the upper ocean, Meinen says, but he also notes that since warm water rises, it would take a lot of heat to generate even this little bit of warming so deep.
    It’s too soon to judge whether human activity or natural variation is the cause, Meinen says. Continuing to monitor these sites and comparing the records with data from devices in other ocean basins may help to clarify matters.
(Adapted from: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/ocean-warming-deepest-coldest-temperature).
In the title, the phrase “coldest parts of the ocean” means, in Portuguese:
Alternativas
Respostas
6: C
7: D
8: A
9: D
10: B