Questões de Concurso Público SEE-AC 2020 para PNS P2 - Língua Inglesa

Foram encontradas 50 questões

Q1693607 História e Geografia de Estados e Municípios
“Há exatos 115 anos teve início a Revolução Acreana, inadequadamente assim denominada, posto a ausência de significativas mudanças sociais e econômicas para os habitantes do Acre...”
(http://periodicos.ufac.br/index.php/jamaxi/article/view/1441/863) – Acessado em março 2020
Acerca da Revolução Acreana, é correto afirmar que:
Alternativas
Q1693608 História e Geografia de Estados e Municípios
As Correrias eram expedições armadas. Eram formadas com intuito de “limpar” as matas, assim atacavam aldeias indígenas do território acreano, visando amansar índios brabos, também assassinavam os líderes, expulsando-os ou escravizando-os. Quem eram esses homens brancos, colonizadores, que combatiam os diferentes grupos indígenas?
Alternativas
Q1693609 História e Geografia de Estados e Municípios
No início da década de 1870, a seca no interior nordestino expulsou centenas de pessoas, que rumaram para os seringais, do Acre, que se multiplicavam pelos vales do rio Acre, do rio Purus e, mais a oeste, do rio Tarauacá em busca de trabalho. Os paulistas ou sulistas, como são conhecidos, surgem em terras acreanas cem anos depois, aproximadamente, em busca de:
Alternativas
Q1693610 História e Geografia de Estados e Municípios
“Desde a segunda metade do século XIX, alguns brasileiros, sobretudo nordestinos fustigados por sucessivas secas em suas áreas instalam-se na bacia do rio Acre, para se dedicar à atividade extrativista...”.
(https://www.infoescola.com/historia/tratado-de-petropolis/) Acessado em março de 2020 Sobre a migração nordestina, analise as afirmativas abaixo e assinale a alternativa correspondente.
I - Com o início do "Primeiro Ciclo da Borracha" nos fins dos anos 1970 nordestinos migraram para a região Amazônica para trabalharem na extração do látex, fugidos da seca local; II - Para consolidar os projetos de mineração de ferro foram necessários imensos investimentos por parte de empresas mineradoras e também do governo brasileiro; III - A extração do látex, obtido das seringueiras, árvores nativas do lugar teve grande importância para a economia do estado.
Alternativas
Q1693611 História e Geografia de Estados e Municípios
Sobre o relevo, a vegetação e suas características, o clima e a hidrografia, do Acre, analise as afirmativas e assinale a alternativa correspondente.
https://www.infoescola.com/geografia/geografia-do-acre/) Acessado em marços de 2020.
I - A menor parte do território acreano é recoberto por depressões e formações de planícies estreitas ao norte, que raramente alcançam 50 metros de altitude; II - Em razão do grande volume de chuvas e da farta rede fluvial, a vegetação do Acre é revestida por densa floresta equatorial de terra firme, onde o clima apresenta durante todo o ano altas temperaturas e umidade; III - Os rios acreanos possuem grande importância para a navegação, para o transporte de mercadorias e de pessoas e para a fixação das populações ribeirinhas.
https://www.infoescola.com/geografia/geografia-do-acre/) Acessado em marços de 2020
Alternativas
Q1693612 História e Geografia de Estados e Municípios
O Estado do Acre faz divisa com dois estados brasileiros e também com dois países Sul-americanos. Assinale a alternativa que corresponde aos dois estados e aos dois países.
Alternativas
Q1693613 História e Geografia de Estados e Municípios
Atualmente, o principal produto de exportação do Acre é o (a):
Alternativas
Q1693614 História e Geografia de Estados e Municípios
Ela fica no Acre, e é a maior reserva extrativista do país. Em boa parte da reserva, o extrativismo ainda é a principal fonte de renda das famílias. Foi criada em 1990 e grande parte da área fica entre os municípios de Xapuri e Brasileia. São características de qual reserva extrativista do Acre?
http://g1.globo.com/natureza/noticia/2016/01/reservas-extrativistas-noacre-sao-marcadas-pelos-contrastes.html) Acessado em março de 2020.
Alternativas
Q1693615 Geografia
A Amazônia possui uma reserva de água subterrânea com volume estimado em mais de 160 trilhões de metros cúbicos. Assinale a alternativa que corresponda ao nome atribuído recentemente a essa reserva de água subterrânea.
Alternativas
Q1705149 Inglês

TEXT

REFERS TO QUESTION


Lessons for Americans, From a Chines Classroom


Observing how Chinese 2- and 3-year-olds navigated a second language, I wondered whether I could have done this for my children.

SHANGHAI — We sat in toddler-size wooden chairs around an orderly circle of Chinese 2-year-olds, busy with circle time. As a parent of three children who collectively spent 15 years in American day care, I am very familiar with circle time.

But I was in this Shanghai classroom as a professor, with college students from many different countries in a class I’m teaching here on children and childhood.

We were observing in a private kindergarten, designed to provide young children — starting at age 2 — with a carefully structured, fully bilingual curriculum, especially important because English language skills are vital for educational success in China.

Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children and the ways that they learn, while also thinking about Chinese society today. They get windows onto certain slices of this complex country: a high-end private bilingual program that starts with toddlers; a city high school for academically gifted students; a middle school created for the children of the rural migrants who have come by the millions from China’s poorer provinces to work in Shanghai, but whose rights to social benefits are severely limited in the city.

These visits offer the college students insights into many of the social issues facing China, and we spend time in class discussing questions like the huge role that the annual gaokao college entrance exam plays in determining a child’s educational destiny (English is one of the required subjects), the pressures on families that create a culture of cram schools, and the controversies over reserving spots in colleges for kids from rural areas.

But all of those questions have powerful resonances when you think about the issues of childhood education and child development, which have to be addressed in every country. As my college students discuss the different facets of childhood around the world, visiting the Chinese schools also helps them in remembering and thinking about what children look like at different ages, and how they play and interact and learn.


Available in : https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/, accessed on February 26th, 2020. Adapted

Read the sentences below and choose one which has a verb in the Simple Past.
Alternativas
Q1709963 Inglês

REFERS TO QUESTION


Lessons for Americans, From a Chines Classroom


Observing how Chinese 2- and 3-year-olds navigated a second language, I wondered whether I could have done this for my children.

SHANGHAI — We sat in toddler-size wooden chairs around an orderly circle of Chinese 2-year-olds, busy with circle time. As a parent of three children who collectively spent 15 years in American day care, I am very familiar with circle time.

But I was in this Shanghai classroom as a professor, with college students from many different countries in a class I’m teaching here on children and childhood.

We were observing in a private kindergarten, designed to provide young children — starting at age 2 — with a carefully structured, fully bilingual curriculum, especially important because English language skills are vital for educational success in China.

Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children and the ways that they learn, while also thinking about Chinese society today. They get windows onto certain slices of this complex country: a high-end private bilingual program that starts with toddlers; a city high school for academically gifted students; a middle school created for the children of the rural migrants who have come by the millions from China’s poorer provinces to work in Shanghai, but whose rights to social benefits are severely limited in the city.

These visits offer the college students insights into many of the social issues facing China, and we spend time in class discussing questions like the huge role that the annual gaokao college entrance exam plays in determining a child’s educational destiny (English is one of the required subjects), the pressures on families that create a culture of cram schools, and the controversies over reserving spots in colleges for kids from rural areas.

But all of those questions have powerful resonances when you think about the issues of childhood education and child development, which have to be addressed in every country. As my college students discuss the different facets of childhood around the world, visiting the Chinese schools also helps them in remembering and thinking about what children look like at different ages, and how they play and interact and learn. 

Available in : https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/, accessed on February 26th, 2020. Adapted

The preposition ONTO in “They get windows onto certain slices of this complex country” indicates movement. Which sentence also has a preposition which indicates movement?
Alternativas
Q1709964 Inglês

REFERS TO QUESTION


Lessons for Americans, From a Chines Classroom


Observing how Chinese 2- and 3-year-olds navigated a second language, I wondered whether I could have done this for my children.

SHANGHAI — We sat in toddler-size wooden chairs around an orderly circle of Chinese 2-year-olds, busy with circle time. As a parent of three children who collectively spent 15 years in American day care, I am very familiar with circle time.

But I was in this Shanghai classroom as a professor, with college students from many different countries in a class I’m teaching here on children and childhood.

We were observing in a private kindergarten, designed to provide young children — starting at age 2 — with a carefully structured, fully bilingual curriculum, especially important because English language skills are vital for educational success in China.

Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children and the ways that they learn, while also thinking about Chinese society today. They get windows onto certain slices of this complex country: a high-end private bilingual program that starts with toddlers; a city high school for academically gifted students; a middle school created for the children of the rural migrants who have come by the millions from China’s poorer provinces to work in Shanghai, but whose rights to social benefits are severely limited in the city.

These visits offer the college students insights into many of the social issues facing China, and we spend time in class discussing questions like the huge role that the annual gaokao college entrance exam plays in determining a child’s educational destiny (English is one of the required subjects), the pressures on families that create a culture of cram schools, and the controversies over reserving spots in colleges for kids from rural areas.

But all of those questions have powerful resonances when you think about the issues of childhood education and child development, which have to be addressed in every country. As my college students discuss the different facets of childhood around the world, visiting the Chinese schools also helps them in remembering and thinking about what children look like at different ages, and how they play and interact and learn. 

Available in : https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/, accessed on February 26th, 2020. Adapted

Which option has a tag question that completes the following sentence correctly?

“I am very familiar with circle time, ____________”

Alternativas
Q1709965 Inglês

REFERS TO QUESTION


Lessons for Americans, From a Chines Classroom


Observing how Chinese 2- and 3-year-olds navigated a second language, I wondered whether I could have done this for my children.

SHANGHAI — We sat in toddler-size wooden chairs around an orderly circle of Chinese 2-year-olds, busy with circle time. As a parent of three children who collectively spent 15 years in American day care, I am very familiar with circle time.

But I was in this Shanghai classroom as a professor, with college students from many different countries in a class I’m teaching here on children and childhood.

We were observing in a private kindergarten, designed to provide young children — starting at age 2 — with a carefully structured, fully bilingual curriculum, especially important because English language skills are vital for educational success in China.

Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children and the ways that they learn, while also thinking about Chinese society today. They get windows onto certain slices of this complex country: a high-end private bilingual program that starts with toddlers; a city high school for academically gifted students; a middle school created for the children of the rural migrants who have come by the millions from China’s poorer provinces to work in Shanghai, but whose rights to social benefits are severely limited in the city.

These visits offer the college students insights into many of the social issues facing China, and we spend time in class discussing questions like the huge role that the annual gaokao college entrance exam plays in determining a child’s educational destiny (English is one of the required subjects), the pressures on families that create a culture of cram schools, and the controversies over reserving spots in colleges for kids from rural areas.

But all of those questions have powerful resonances when you think about the issues of childhood education and child development, which have to be addressed in every country. As my college students discuss the different facets of childhood around the world, visiting the Chinese schools also helps them in remembering and thinking about what children look like at different ages, and how they play and interact and learn. 

Available in : https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/, accessed on February 26th, 2020. Adapted

The expression LOOK LIKE in “thinking about what children look like at different ages” could be replaced in this context, without change of meaning, by:
Alternativas
Q1709966 Inglês

REFERS TO QUESTION


Lessons for Americans, From a Chines Classroom


Observing how Chinese 2- and 3-year-olds navigated a second language, I wondered whether I could have done this for my children.

SHANGHAI — We sat in toddler-size wooden chairs around an orderly circle of Chinese 2-year-olds, busy with circle time. As a parent of three children who collectively spent 15 years in American day care, I am very familiar with circle time.

But I was in this Shanghai classroom as a professor, with college students from many different countries in a class I’m teaching here on children and childhood.

We were observing in a private kindergarten, designed to provide young children — starting at age 2 — with a carefully structured, fully bilingual curriculum, especially important because English language skills are vital for educational success in China.

Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children and the ways that they learn, while also thinking about Chinese society today. They get windows onto certain slices of this complex country: a high-end private bilingual program that starts with toddlers; a city high school for academically gifted students; a middle school created for the children of the rural migrants who have come by the millions from China’s poorer provinces to work in Shanghai, but whose rights to social benefits are severely limited in the city.

These visits offer the college students insights into many of the social issues facing China, and we spend time in class discussing questions like the huge role that the annual gaokao college entrance exam plays in determining a child’s educational destiny (English is one of the required subjects), the pressures on families that create a culture of cram schools, and the controversies over reserving spots in colleges for kids from rural areas.

But all of those questions have powerful resonances when you think about the issues of childhood education and child development, which have to be addressed in every country. As my college students discuss the different facets of childhood around the world, visiting the Chinese schools also helps them in remembering and thinking about what children look like at different ages, and how they play and interact and learn. 

Available in : https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/, accessed on February 26th, 2020. Adapted

The word WHO is:
Alternativas
Q1709967 Inglês

REFERS TO QUESTION


Lessons for Americans, From a Chines Classroom


Observing how Chinese 2- and 3-year-olds navigated a second language, I wondered whether I could have done this for my children.

SHANGHAI — We sat in toddler-size wooden chairs around an orderly circle of Chinese 2-year-olds, busy with circle time. As a parent of three children who collectively spent 15 years in American day care, I am very familiar with circle time.

But I was in this Shanghai classroom as a professor, with college students from many different countries in a class I’m teaching here on children and childhood.

We were observing in a private kindergarten, designed to provide young children — starting at age 2 — with a carefully structured, fully bilingual curriculum, especially important because English language skills are vital for educational success in China.

Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children and the ways that they learn, while also thinking about Chinese society today. They get windows onto certain slices of this complex country: a high-end private bilingual program that starts with toddlers; a city high school for academically gifted students; a middle school created for the children of the rural migrants who have come by the millions from China’s poorer provinces to work in Shanghai, but whose rights to social benefits are severely limited in the city.

These visits offer the college students insights into many of the social issues facing China, and we spend time in class discussing questions like the huge role that the annual gaokao college entrance exam plays in determining a child’s educational destiny (English is one of the required subjects), the pressures on families that create a culture of cram schools, and the controversies over reserving spots in colleges for kids from rural areas.

But all of those questions have powerful resonances when you think about the issues of childhood education and child development, which have to be addressed in every country. As my college students discuss the different facets of childhood around the world, visiting the Chinese schools also helps them in remembering and thinking about what children look like at different ages, and how they play and interact and learn. 

Available in : https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/, accessed on February 26th, 2020. Adapted

A synonym for the word HUGE in “the huge role” is:
Alternativas
Q1709969 Inglês

REFERS TO QUESTION


Lessons for Americans, From a Chines Classroom


Observing how Chinese 2- and 3-year-olds navigated a second language, I wondered whether I could have done this for my children.

SHANGHAI — We sat in toddler-size wooden chairs around an orderly circle of Chinese 2-year-olds, busy with circle time. As a parent of three children who collectively spent 15 years in American day care, I am very familiar with circle time.

But I was in this Shanghai classroom as a professor, with college students from many different countries in a class I’m teaching here on children and childhood.

We were observing in a private kindergarten, designed to provide young children — starting at age 2 — with a carefully structured, fully bilingual curriculum, especially important because English language skills are vital for educational success in China.

Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children and the ways that they learn, while also thinking about Chinese society today. They get windows onto certain slices of this complex country: a high-end private bilingual program that starts with toddlers; a city high school for academically gifted students; a middle school created for the children of the rural migrants who have come by the millions from China’s poorer provinces to work in Shanghai, but whose rights to social benefits are severely limited in the city.

These visits offer the college students insights into many of the social issues facing China, and we spend time in class discussing questions like the huge role that the annual gaokao college entrance exam plays in determining a child’s educational destiny (English is one of the required subjects), the pressures on families that create a culture of cram schools, and the controversies over reserving spots in colleges for kids from rural areas.

But all of those questions have powerful resonances when you think about the issues of childhood education and child development, which have to be addressed in every country. As my college students discuss the different facets of childhood around the world, visiting the Chinese schools also helps them in remembering and thinking about what children look like at different ages, and how they play and interact and learn. 

Available in : https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/, accessed on February 26th, 2020. Adapted

Todas as palavras a seguir são cognatas, EXCETO:
Alternativas
Q1709970 Inglês

REFERS TO QUESTION


Lessons for Americans, From a Chines Classroom


Observing how Chinese 2- and 3-year-olds navigated a second language, I wondered whether I could have done this for my children.

SHANGHAI — We sat in toddler-size wooden chairs around an orderly circle of Chinese 2-year-olds, busy with circle time. As a parent of three children who collectively spent 15 years in American day care, I am very familiar with circle time.

But I was in this Shanghai classroom as a professor, with college students from many different countries in a class I’m teaching here on children and childhood.

We were observing in a private kindergarten, designed to provide young children — starting at age 2 — with a carefully structured, fully bilingual curriculum, especially important because English language skills are vital for educational success in China.

Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children and the ways that they learn, while also thinking about Chinese society today. They get windows onto certain slices of this complex country: a high-end private bilingual program that starts with toddlers; a city high school for academically gifted students; a middle school created for the children of the rural migrants who have come by the millions from China’s poorer provinces to work in Shanghai, but whose rights to social benefits are severely limited in the city.

These visits offer the college students insights into many of the social issues facing China, and we spend time in class discussing questions like the huge role that the annual gaokao college entrance exam plays in determining a child’s educational destiny (English is one of the required subjects), the pressures on families that create a culture of cram schools, and the controversies over reserving spots in colleges for kids from rural areas.

But all of those questions have powerful resonances when you think about the issues of childhood education and child development, which have to be addressed in every country. As my college students discuss the different facets of childhood around the world, visiting the Chinese schools also helps them in remembering and thinking about what children look like at different ages, and how they play and interact and learn. 

Available in : https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/, accessed on February 26th, 2020. Adapted

The suffix of the word POORER in has the same meanig as in:
Alternativas
Q1709971 Inglês

TEXT 

REFERS TO QUESTION


Available in: https://www.gocomics.com, accessed on February 18th, 2020. Garfield by Jim Davis


Read the sentences below and choose the one that has a verb which could replace ALLOW and keep the same meaning as in “Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children”.
Alternativas
Q1709972 Inglês

TEXT 

REFERS TO QUESTION


Available in: https://www.gocomics.com, accessed on February 18th, 2020. Garfield by Jim Davis


Choose correct meaning for MISSUS as in: “So what did you get the missus this year?”
Alternativas
Respostas
21: B
22: A
23: A
24: C
25: C
26: A
27: C
28: D
29: A
30: A
31: E
32: E
33: C
34: C
35: A
36: B
37: B
38: D
39: E
40: A