Questões de Concurso Público Prefeitura de São Miguel do Guamá - PA 2016 para Professor Língua Inglesa
Foram encontradas 50 questões
De acordo com o Regime Jurídico Único dos Servidores Públicos Civis da Administração Direta, das Autarquias e das Fundações Públicas do Município de São Miguel do Guamá (Lei Complementar n.° 01/94), leia os itens seguintes:
I- ______________ é a pessoa legalmente investida em cargo público.
II- ______________ é o criado por lei, com denominação própria, quantitativo e vencimentos certos, cometendo ao servidor atribuições e responsabilidades.
III- ______________ é o conjunto de cargos da mesma natureza de trabalho.
IV - ______________ é o conjunto de categorias funcionais da mesma natureza, escalonadas segundo a escolaridade, nível de complexidade e grau de responsabilidade.
Preenchem as lacunas corretamente:
Acerca do Regime Jurídico Único dos Servidores Públicos Civis da Administração Direta, das Autarquias e das Fundações Públicas do Município de S ã o Miguel do Guamá (Lei Complementar n.° 01/94), leia os itens seguintes:
I- O serviço público estimulará e contratará também estagiário estudante, por prazo de até 24 (vinte e quatro) meses.
II- É vedado ao servidor participar de concurso de natureza técnica, científica ou artística, promovido pelo Município.
III- O Município deverá contar com sistema previdenciário próprio, vedada a adesão, mediante convênio ou outro instrumento, ao ente de Seguridade do Estado do Pará.
IV- Será concedida ao servidor a participação no Programa de Formação do Patrimônio do Servidor Público.
Estão corretos apenas os itens:
Leia os itens seguintes acerca do Poder Legislativo Municipal:
I- É vedado ao Município legislar sobre a concessão de serviços públicos.
II- Compete privativamente à Câmara Municipal dar posse ao Prefeito e Vice-Prefeito.
III- A Câmara Municipal delibera, mediante resolução, sobre os assuntos de economia interna e demais casos de sua competência privativa, por meio de Decreto Legislativo.
IV- Perderá o mandato o Vereador investido no cargo de Secretário Municipal.
Estão corretos, conforme a Lei Orgânica do Município de São
Miguel do Guamá, apenas os itens:
Julgue os itens a seguir em Verdadeiro (V) ou Falso (F), com base na Lei Orgânica do Município de São Miguel do Guamá:
I- Leis de iniciativa da Câmara estabelecerão o plano plurianual, as diretrizes orçamentárias e os orçamentos anuais.
II- O Poder Executivo publicará, até trinta dias após o encerramento de cada bimestre, relatório resumido da execução orçamentária.
III- A Lei Orçamentária anual poderá conter dispositivo estranho à previsão da receita e a fixação das despesas, como a autorização de operações de crédito, exceto por antecipação de receita, nos termos da lei.
IV- O s programas suplementares de alimentação e assistência à saúde previstos na Lei Orgânica serão financiados com recursos provenientes de contribuições estabelecidas em lei complementar.
Assinale a alternativa que apresenta a correlação correta:
Sobre a disciplina da Educação Especial na LDB (Lei n.° 9.394), analise os itens seguintes:
I- Entende-se por educação especial, para os efeitos desta Lei, a modalidade de educação escolar oferecida preferencialmente na rede regular de ensino, para educandos com deficiência, transtornos globais do desenvolvimento e altas habilidades ou superdotação.
II- O atendimento educacional será feito sempre em classes especializadas, diferentes das classes comuns de ensino regular.
III- O poder público deverá instituir cadastro nacional de alunos com altas habilidades ou superdotação matriculados na educação básica e na educação superior, a fim de fomentar a execução de políticas públicas destinadas ao desenvolvimento pleno das potencialidades desse alunado.
IV- Os órgãos normativos dos sistemas de ensino estabelecerão critérios de caracterização das instituições privadas sem fins lucrativos, especializadas e com atuação exclusiva em educação especial, para fins de apoio técnico e financeiro pelo Poder Público.
Marque a alternativa correta:
Leia os itens seguintes a respeito do Conselho Escolar:
I- O Conselho Escolar é um colegiado de natureza meramente consultiva, vinculado à escola, visando proporcionar apoio à unidade escolar.
lI- Uma das finalidades do Conselho Escolar é consolidar o processo educativo, buscando a socialização das decisões quanto ao plano global da escola.
III- São membros natos do Conselho Escolar de cada Unidade de Ensino o gestor, o vice-gestor e o representante dos serviços pedagógicos.
IV- O Conselho Escolar reunir-se-á ordinariamente uma vez a cada bimestre e extraordinariamente quando se fizer necessário, por provocação do coordenador ou por 1/3 (um terço) de seus membros.
Estão corretos apenas os itens:
Brazil lmpeachment: The Process for Removing the President
ByTHE NEW YORKTIMES UPDATED May 12, 2016
Dilma Rousseff, the beleaguered president of Brazil, has been confronting an effort to remove her from office, accused of violating fiscal laws by using funds from state banks to cover budget shortfalls.
Her opponents claim this strategy eroded confidence among investors, raising the government's borrowing costs and disregarding measures designed to prevent a return of high inflation.
The president's supporters contend that Ms. Rousseff was seeking to maintain popular antipoverty projects, and that impeachment over the issue is politically motivated because Ms. Rousseff's predecessors carried out similar policies.
Here is a guide to the complicated process for impeaching and removing a president from office:
Step1
Congressional Panei Debates Charges
The process prescribed in Brazil's Constitution, adopted in 1988, shares similarities with impeachment proceedings in the United States.
First, the speaker of the lower chamber of Congress, Eduardo Cunha, a political opponent of Ms. Rousseff, had to accept a petition for impeachment.
Mr. Cunha then formed a 65-member congressional committee to investigate the accusations and decide if removal was warranted. The political composition of the committee was largely stacked against the president.
The committee was created in December, but its work was soon stopped by a court arder. Work resumed in March.
Jovair Arantes, the legislator in charge of preparing the committee report on the fate of Ms. Rousseff and an ally of Mr. Cunha, recommended on April 6 that proceedings move forward to remove her from office.
The full committee, in a 38-27 vote on April 11, agreed, clearing the way for a vote on her impeachment in Brazil's Chamber of Deputies.
Step2
Chamber of Deputies Votes
On April 17, the lower chamber voted for impeachment. At least two-thirds ofthe 513 deputies had to vote for impeachment forthe motion to pass. The decisiva 342nd vote was cast about five-anda-half hours afterthe floorvote started.
ln early May, Brazil's top court, the Supreme Federal Tribunal, removed Mr. Cunha from his speaker role on charges of obstructing a corruption investigation.
Step3
The Role ofthe Senate and Vice President
After the lower chamber vote, the process then moved to the Senate, which had to decide, with a sim pie majority vote, whether to accept the charges.
On May 12, the Senate voted 55 to 22 to begin the triai, resulting in Ms. Rousseff's suspension. The vice president then took over, with the authority to appoint ministers and enact policy.
Michel Temer, the vice president who assumed the president's office, is a member of the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party. His party had been a crucial part of Ms. Rousseff's governing coalition, but it recently voted to split with her Workers' Party, which significantly increased the odds of Ms. Rousseff's impeachment.
Mr. Temer, 75, was himself under scrutiny over claims that he was involved in an illegal ethanol purchasing scheme.
Step4
Removal or Reinstatement
The Senate triai will be overseen by the chief justice of the Suprema Federal Tribunal, Ricardo Lewandowski. Two-thirds of the 81 senators must vote in favor of removing the president from office. lf that happens, Mr. Temer would serve as president for the remainder of Ms. Rousseff's term through the end of 2018.
lf no decision is reached within 180 days, the suspension of the president ends.
Asked in a recent interview with The New York Times whether she would accept a vote to impeach her, Ms. Rousseff, 68, said, "We will appeal with every legal method available."
She has that option: "She can appeal at any moment she finds something legally questionable occurring in the process," said Brasílio Sallum Jr., a professor of sociology at the University of São Paulo and an expert in Brazil's political processes.
Com base na Leitura do texto "Brazil lmpeachment: The Process for Removing the President", responda a questão.
Brazil lmpeachment: The Process for Removing the President
ByTHE NEW YORKTIMES UPDATED May 12, 2016
Dilma Rousseff, the beleaguered president of Brazil, has been confronting an effort to remove her from office, accused of violating fiscal laws by using funds from state banks to cover budget shortfalls.
Her opponents claim this strategy eroded confidence among investors, raising the government's borrowing costs and disregarding measures designed to prevent a return of high inflation.
The president's supporters contend that Ms. Rousseff was seeking to maintain popular antipoverty projects, and that impeachment over the issue is politically motivated because Ms. Rousseff's predecessors carried out similar policies.
Here is a guide to the complicated process for impeaching and removing a president from office:
Step1
Congressional Panei Debates Charges
The process prescribed in Brazil's Constitution, adopted in 1988, shares similarities with impeachment proceedings in the United States.
First, the speaker of the lower chamber of Congress, Eduardo Cunha, a political opponent of Ms. Rousseff, had to accept a petition for impeachment.
Mr. Cunha then formed a 65-member congressional committee to investigate the accusations and decide if removal was warranted. The political composition of the committee was largely stacked against the president.
The committee was created in December, but its work was soon stopped by a court arder. Work resumed in March.
Jovair Arantes, the legislator in charge of preparing the committee report on the fate of Ms. Rousseff and an ally of Mr. Cunha, recommended on April 6 that proceedings move forward to remove her from office.
The full committee, in a 38-27 vote on April 11, agreed, clearing the way for a vote on her impeachment in Brazil's Chamber of Deputies.
Step2
Chamber of Deputies Votes
On April 17, the lower chamber voted for impeachment. At least two-thirds ofthe 513 deputies had to vote for impeachment forthe motion to pass. The decisiva 342nd vote was cast about five-anda-half hours afterthe floorvote started.
ln early May, Brazil's top court, the Supreme Federal Tribunal, removed Mr. Cunha from his speaker role on charges of obstructing a corruption investigation.
Step3
The Role ofthe Senate and Vice President
After the lower chamber vote, the process then moved to the Senate, which had to decide, with a sim pie majority vote, whether to accept the charges.
On May 12, the Senate voted 55 to 22 to begin the triai, resulting in Ms. Rousseff's suspension. The vice president then took over, with the authority to appoint ministers and enact policy.
Michel Temer, the vice president who assumed the president's office, is a member of the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party. His party had been a crucial part of Ms. Rousseff's governing coalition, but it recently voted to split with her Workers' Party, which significantly increased the odds of Ms. Rousseff's impeachment.
Mr. Temer, 75, was himself under scrutiny over claims that he was involved in an illegal ethanol purchasing scheme.
Step4
Removal or Reinstatement
The Senate triai will be overseen by the chief justice of the Suprema Federal Tribunal, Ricardo Lewandowski. Two-thirds of the 81 senators must vote in favor of removing the president from office. lf that happens, Mr. Temer would serve as president for the remainder of Ms. Rousseff's term through the end of 2018.
lf no decision is reached within 180 days, the suspension of the president ends.
Asked in a recent interview with The New York Times whether she would accept a vote to impeach her, Ms. Rousseff, 68, said, "We will appeal with every legal method available."
She has that option: "She can appeal at any moment she finds something legally questionable occurring in the process," said Brasílio Sallum Jr., a professor of sociology at the University of São Paulo and an expert in Brazil's political processes.
Com base na Leitura do texto "Brazil lmpeachment: The Process for Removing the President", responda a questão.
Brazil lmpeachment: The Process for Removing the President
ByTHE NEW YORKTIMES UPDATED May 12, 2016
Dilma Rousseff, the beleaguered president of Brazil, has been confronting an effort to remove her from office, accused of violating fiscal laws by using funds from state banks to cover budget shortfalls.
Her opponents claim this strategy eroded confidence among investors, raising the government's borrowing costs and disregarding measures designed to prevent a return of high inflation.
The president's supporters contend that Ms. Rousseff was seeking to maintain popular antipoverty projects, and that impeachment over the issue is politically motivated because Ms. Rousseff's predecessors carried out similar policies.
Here is a guide to the complicated process for impeaching and removing a president from office:
Step1
Congressional Panei Debates Charges
The process prescribed in Brazil's Constitution, adopted in 1988, shares similarities with impeachment proceedings in the United States.
First, the speaker of the lower chamber of Congress, Eduardo Cunha, a political opponent of Ms. Rousseff, had to accept a petition for impeachment.
Mr. Cunha then formed a 65-member congressional committee to investigate the accusations and decide if removal was warranted. The political composition of the committee was largely stacked against the president.
The committee was created in December, but its work was soon stopped by a court arder. Work resumed in March.
Jovair Arantes, the legislator in charge of preparing the committee report on the fate of Ms. Rousseff and an ally of Mr. Cunha, recommended on April 6 that proceedings move forward to remove her from office.
The full committee, in a 38-27 vote on April 11, agreed, clearing the way for a vote on her impeachment in Brazil's Chamber of Deputies.
Step2
Chamber of Deputies Votes
On April 17, the lower chamber voted for impeachment. At least two-thirds ofthe 513 deputies had to vote for impeachment forthe motion to pass. The decisiva 342nd vote was cast about five-anda-half hours afterthe floorvote started.
ln early May, Brazil's top court, the Supreme Federal Tribunal, removed Mr. Cunha from his speaker role on charges of obstructing a corruption investigation.
Step3
The Role ofthe Senate and Vice President
After the lower chamber vote, the process then moved to the Senate, which had to decide, with a sim pie majority vote, whether to accept the charges.
On May 12, the Senate voted 55 to 22 to begin the triai, resulting in Ms. Rousseff's suspension. The vice president then took over, with the authority to appoint ministers and enact policy.
Michel Temer, the vice president who assumed the president's office, is a member of the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party. His party had been a crucial part of Ms. Rousseff's governing coalition, but it recently voted to split with her Workers' Party, which significantly increased the odds of Ms. Rousseff's impeachment.
Mr. Temer, 75, was himself under scrutiny over claims that he was involved in an illegal ethanol purchasing scheme.
Step4
Removal or Reinstatement
The Senate triai will be overseen by the chief justice of the Suprema Federal Tribunal, Ricardo Lewandowski. Two-thirds of the 81 senators must vote in favor of removing the president from office. lf that happens, Mr. Temer would serve as president for the remainder of Ms. Rousseff's term through the end of 2018.
lf no decision is reached within 180 days, the suspension of the president ends.
Asked in a recent interview with The New York Times whether she would accept a vote to impeach her, Ms. Rousseff, 68, said, "We will appeal with every legal method available."
She has that option: "She can appeal at any moment she finds something legally questionable occurring in the process," said Brasílio Sallum Jr., a professor of sociology at the University of São Paulo and an expert in Brazil's political processes.
Com base na Leitura do texto "Brazil lmpeachment: The Process for Removing the President", responda a questão.