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Q1739032 Pedagogia
Sobre o modelo didático da exposição oral, assinale a alternativa incorreta.
Alternativas
Q1739023 Pedagogia

INSTRUÇÃO: Leia o fragmento a seguir para responder à questão.


Referentes são entidades que construímos e reconstruímos em nossa mente à medida que transcorre qualquer enunciação. [...] Não são realidades concretas do mundo, mas entidades que representamos, cada uma à sua maneira, portanto, em cada contexto enunciativo reflexivo.


CAVALCANTE, In. ELIAS. (org.) Ensino de Língua Portuguesa: oralidade, escrita, leitura. 1ª ed, 1ª reimpressão. São Paulo: Contexto, 2013, p. 183.

O fragmento “avaliar é justamente estar sempre questionando e refletindo sobre o contexto educacional em toda a sua complexidade.” (Hoffmann, 2011, p. 8) confirma o posicionamento sobre a Avaliação
Alternativas
Q1739006 Inglês

Text 


When Jane and Elizabeth were alone, the former, who had been cautious in her praise of Mr. Bingley before, expressed to her sister just how very much she admired him.

“He is just what a young man ought to be,” said she, “sensible, good-humoured, lively; and I never saw such happy manners! – so much ease, with such perfect good breeding!”

“He is also handsome,” replied Elizabeth, “which a young man ought likewise to be, if he possibly can. His character is thereby complete.” 

“I was very much flattered by his asking me to dance a second time. I did not expect such a compliment.”

“Did not you? I did for you. But that is one great difference between us. Compliments always take you by surprise, and me never. What could be more natural than his asking you again? He could not help seeing that you were about five times as pretty as every other woman in the room. No thanks to his gallantry for that. Well, he certainly is very agreeable, and I give you leave to like him. You have liked many a stupider person.”

“Dear Lizzy!”

“Oh! you are a great deal too apt, you know, to like people in general. You never see a fault in anybody. All the world are good and agreeable in your eyes. I never heard you speak ill of a human being in your life.”

“I would not wish to be hasty in censuring anyone; but I always speak what I think.”

“I know you do; and it is that which makes the wonder. With your good sense, to be so honestly blind to the follies and nonsense of others! Affectation of candour is common enough – one meets with it everywhere. But to be candid without ostentation or design – to take the good of everybody’s character and make it still better, and say nothing of the bad – belongs to you alone. And so you like this man’s sisters, too, do you? Their manners are not equal to his.”

“Certainly not – at first. But they are very pleasing women when you converse with them. Miss Bingley is to live with her brother, and keep his house; and I am much mistaken if we shall not find a very charming neighbour in her.”

Elizabeth listened in silence, but was not convinced; their behaviour at the assembly had not been calculated to please in general; and with more quickness of observation and less pliancy of temper than her sister, and with a judgement too unassailed by any attention to herself, she was very little disposed to approve them. They were in fact very fine ladies; not deficient in good humour when they were pleased, nor in the power of making themselves agreeable when they chose it, but proud and conceited. They were rather handsome, had been educated in one of the first private seminaries in town, had a fortune of twenty thousand pounds, were in the habit of spending more than they ought, and of associating with people of rank, and were therefore in every respect entitled to think well of themselves, and meanly of others. They were of a respectable family in the north of England; a circumstance more deeply impressed on their memories than that their brother’s fortune and their own had been acquired by trade.


Austen, Jane: Pride and Prejudice, chapter 4. Available at:

<https://www.gutenberg.org>. Accessed on: October 29th, 2018.



Many forms of comparative adjectives end with the suffix “–er”. Mark the alternative which shows such a form.
Alternativas
Q1739003 Inglês

Text 


When Jane and Elizabeth were alone, the former, who had been cautious in her praise of Mr. Bingley before, expressed to her sister just how very much she admired him.

“He is just what a young man ought to be,” said she, “sensible, good-humoured, lively; and I never saw such happy manners! – so much ease, with such perfect good breeding!”

“He is also handsome,” replied Elizabeth, “which a young man ought likewise to be, if he possibly can. His character is thereby complete.” 

“I was very much flattered by his asking me to dance a second time. I did not expect such a compliment.”

“Did not you? I did for you. But that is one great difference between us. Compliments always take you by surprise, and me never. What could be more natural than his asking you again? He could not help seeing that you were about five times as pretty as every other woman in the room. No thanks to his gallantry for that. Well, he certainly is very agreeable, and I give you leave to like him. You have liked many a stupider person.”

“Dear Lizzy!”

“Oh! you are a great deal too apt, you know, to like people in general. You never see a fault in anybody. All the world are good and agreeable in your eyes. I never heard you speak ill of a human being in your life.”

“I would not wish to be hasty in censuring anyone; but I always speak what I think.”

“I know you do; and it is that which makes the wonder. With your good sense, to be so honestly blind to the follies and nonsense of others! Affectation of candour is common enough – one meets with it everywhere. But to be candid without ostentation or design – to take the good of everybody’s character and make it still better, and say nothing of the bad – belongs to you alone. And so you like this man’s sisters, too, do you? Their manners are not equal to his.”

“Certainly not – at first. But they are very pleasing women when you converse with them. Miss Bingley is to live with her brother, and keep his house; and I am much mistaken if we shall not find a very charming neighbour in her.”

Elizabeth listened in silence, but was not convinced; their behaviour at the assembly had not been calculated to please in general; and with more quickness of observation and less pliancy of temper than her sister, and with a judgement too unassailed by any attention to herself, she was very little disposed to approve them. They were in fact very fine ladies; not deficient in good humour when they were pleased, nor in the power of making themselves agreeable when they chose it, but proud and conceited. They were rather handsome, had been educated in one of the first private seminaries in town, had a fortune of twenty thousand pounds, were in the habit of spending more than they ought, and of associating with people of rank, and were therefore in every respect entitled to think well of themselves, and meanly of others. They were of a respectable family in the north of England; a circumstance more deeply impressed on their memories than that their brother’s fortune and their own had been acquired by trade.


Austen, Jane: Pride and Prejudice, chapter 4. Available at:

<https://www.gutenberg.org>. Accessed on: October 29th, 2018.



Adverbs of manner are made by adding the suffix “–ly” to an adjective. Mark the alternative that contradicts this rule.
Alternativas
Q1739002 Inglês

Text 


What is applied linguistics?

Vivian Cook, Newcastle University

Polish Translation 


If you tell someone you’re an applied linguist, they look at you with bafflement. If you amplify – it’s to do with linguistics – they still look baffled. You know, linguistics the science of language? Ah so you speak lots of languages? Well no, just English. So what do you actually do? Well I look at how people acquire languages and how we can teach them better. At last light begins to dawn and they tell you a story about how badly they were taught French at school.

The problem is that the applied linguists themselves don’t have much clearer ideas about what the subject consists of. They argue over whether it necessarily has anything to do with language teaching or with linguistics and whether it includes the actual description of language. All of these views exist among applied linguists and are reflected in the MA courses available at British universities under the label of applied linguistics.

The language teaching view of applied linguistics parallels TESOLorTEFL, by looking at ways of improving language teaching, backed by a more rigorous study of language. The motivation is that better teaching will be based on a better understanding of language. However, in British universities language teaching itself is not highly valued, often carried out by ancillary staff, because it does not lend itself easily to the kind of research publications that university careers now depend upon.

The closeness of the link to linguistics is also crucial. At one extreme you need the latest ideas hot from MIT on the principle that information about linguistics must be up-to-date – and linguistic theories change so fast that undergraduates discover their first year courses are out of date by their final year. It’s up to the end-users how they make practical use of the ideas, not the applied linguists.

This raises the issue whether other disciplines are as important as linguistics for applied linguistics. Psychology enters into many courses, as does education, particularly ideas about testing and about language learning. To some applied linguists the discipline draws on any subject with anything to say about language teaching or language learning. To others linguistics is the sole source of ideas. Sometime this is referred to as the issue of ‘autonomous applied linguistics’; is it a separate discipline or a poor relative of linguistics?

To some, applied linguistics is applying theoretical linguistics to actual data. Hence the construction of dictionaries or the collection of ‘corpora’ of millions To some, applied linguistics is applying theoretical linguistics to actual data. Hence the construction of dictionaries or the collection of ‘corpora’ of millions of words of English are applied linguistics, as are the descriptions of social networks or of gender differences (but not usually descriptions of grammar). Once applied linguistics seemed boundless, including the study of first language acquisition and computational linguistics. To many, however, applied linguistics has become synonymous with SLA (though never linked to first language acquisition). SLA (Second Language Acquisition) research has had an enormous growth over the past decades. It enters into all of the above debates. Some people are concerned with classroom language acquisition because of its teaching implications, drawing mostly on psychological models of language and language processing and on social models of interaction and identity; others are concerned with SLA in natural settings. On another dimension, SLA can be seen as providing data to test out linguistic theories rather than to increase our knowledge of SLA itself; they are then more like linguists who happen to use SLA data than investigators of SLA in its own right. On a third dimension the linguistic world is more or less divided between those who see language as masses of things people have said and those who see it as knowledge in people’s minds. Some SLAresearchers analyse large corpora of learner’s utterances or essays; others test their ideas against the barest minimum of data; neither side really accept that the other has a valid point of view.

Applied linguistics then means many things to many people. Discovering what a book or a course in applied linguistics is about involves reading the small print to discover its orientation. Those with an interest in linguistic theory are going to feel frustrated when bombarded with classroom teaching techniques; those who want to handle large amounts of spoken or written data will be disappointed by single example sentences or experiments. Of course many people discover unexpected delights. One of my students who came to an MA course as an EFL course-writer ended up doing a Ph.D. thesis and book on learnability theory. This does not mean that most prospective MA students should not look very carefully, say checking the titles of the modules that actually make up the degree scheme, before they back a particular horse.


Available at: <http://www.viviancook.uk>.

Accessed on: November 2nd, 2018 (Adapted).

Different products come out of applied linguistic studies. Which of the following is absent from the list?
Alternativas
Q1739001 Inglês

Text 


What is applied linguistics?

Vivian Cook, Newcastle University

Polish Translation 


If you tell someone you’re an applied linguist, they look at you with bafflement. If you amplify – it’s to do with linguistics – they still look baffled. You know, linguistics the science of language? Ah so you speak lots of languages? Well no, just English. So what do you actually do? Well I look at how people acquire languages and how we can teach them better. At last light begins to dawn and they tell you a story about how badly they were taught French at school.

The problem is that the applied linguists themselves don’t have much clearer ideas about what the subject consists of. They argue over whether it necessarily has anything to do with language teaching or with linguistics and whether it includes the actual description of language. All of these views exist among applied linguists and are reflected in the MA courses available at British universities under the label of applied linguistics.

The language teaching view of applied linguistics parallels TESOLorTEFL, by looking at ways of improving language teaching, backed by a more rigorous study of language. The motivation is that better teaching will be based on a better understanding of language. However, in British universities language teaching itself is not highly valued, often carried out by ancillary staff, because it does not lend itself easily to the kind of research publications that university careers now depend upon.

The closeness of the link to linguistics is also crucial. At one extreme you need the latest ideas hot from MIT on the principle that information about linguistics must be up-to-date – and linguistic theories change so fast that undergraduates discover their first year courses are out of date by their final year. It’s up to the end-users how they make practical use of the ideas, not the applied linguists.

This raises the issue whether other disciplines are as important as linguistics for applied linguistics. Psychology enters into many courses, as does education, particularly ideas about testing and about language learning. To some applied linguists the discipline draws on any subject with anything to say about language teaching or language learning. To others linguistics is the sole source of ideas. Sometime this is referred to as the issue of ‘autonomous applied linguistics’; is it a separate discipline or a poor relative of linguistics?

To some, applied linguistics is applying theoretical linguistics to actual data. Hence the construction of dictionaries or the collection of ‘corpora’ of millions To some, applied linguistics is applying theoretical linguistics to actual data. Hence the construction of dictionaries or the collection of ‘corpora’ of millions of words of English are applied linguistics, as are the descriptions of social networks or of gender differences (but not usually descriptions of grammar). Once applied linguistics seemed boundless, including the study of first language acquisition and computational linguistics. To many, however, applied linguistics has become synonymous with SLA (though never linked to first language acquisition). SLA (Second Language Acquisition) research has had an enormous growth over the past decades. It enters into all of the above debates. Some people are concerned with classroom language acquisition because of its teaching implications, drawing mostly on psychological models of language and language processing and on social models of interaction and identity; others are concerned with SLA in natural settings. On another dimension, SLA can be seen as providing data to test out linguistic theories rather than to increase our knowledge of SLA itself; they are then more like linguists who happen to use SLA data than investigators of SLA in its own right. On a third dimension the linguistic world is more or less divided between those who see language as masses of things people have said and those who see it as knowledge in people’s minds. Some SLAresearchers analyse large corpora of learner’s utterances or essays; others test their ideas against the barest minimum of data; neither side really accept that the other has a valid point of view.

Applied linguistics then means many things to many people. Discovering what a book or a course in applied linguistics is about involves reading the small print to discover its orientation. Those with an interest in linguistic theory are going to feel frustrated when bombarded with classroom teaching techniques; those who want to handle large amounts of spoken or written data will be disappointed by single example sentences or experiments. Of course many people discover unexpected delights. One of my students who came to an MA course as an EFL course-writer ended up doing a Ph.D. thesis and book on learnability theory. This does not mean that most prospective MA students should not look very carefully, say checking the titles of the modules that actually make up the degree scheme, before they back a particular horse.


Available at: <http://www.viviancook.uk>.

Accessed on: November 2nd, 2018 (Adapted).

Some linguists believe that
Alternativas
Q1739000 Inglês

Text 


What is applied linguistics?

Vivian Cook, Newcastle University

Polish Translation 


If you tell someone you’re an applied linguist, they look at you with bafflement. If you amplify – it’s to do with linguistics – they still look baffled. You know, linguistics the science of language? Ah so you speak lots of languages? Well no, just English. So what do you actually do? Well I look at how people acquire languages and how we can teach them better. At last light begins to dawn and they tell you a story about how badly they were taught French at school.

The problem is that the applied linguists themselves don’t have much clearer ideas about what the subject consists of. They argue over whether it necessarily has anything to do with language teaching or with linguistics and whether it includes the actual description of language. All of these views exist among applied linguists and are reflected in the MA courses available at British universities under the label of applied linguistics.

The language teaching view of applied linguistics parallels TESOLorTEFL, by looking at ways of improving language teaching, backed by a more rigorous study of language. The motivation is that better teaching will be based on a better understanding of language. However, in British universities language teaching itself is not highly valued, often carried out by ancillary staff, because it does not lend itself easily to the kind of research publications that university careers now depend upon.

The closeness of the link to linguistics is also crucial. At one extreme you need the latest ideas hot from MIT on the principle that information about linguistics must be up-to-date – and linguistic theories change so fast that undergraduates discover their first year courses are out of date by their final year. It’s up to the end-users how they make practical use of the ideas, not the applied linguists.

This raises the issue whether other disciplines are as important as linguistics for applied linguistics. Psychology enters into many courses, as does education, particularly ideas about testing and about language learning. To some applied linguists the discipline draws on any subject with anything to say about language teaching or language learning. To others linguistics is the sole source of ideas. Sometime this is referred to as the issue of ‘autonomous applied linguistics’; is it a separate discipline or a poor relative of linguistics?

To some, applied linguistics is applying theoretical linguistics to actual data. Hence the construction of dictionaries or the collection of ‘corpora’ of millions To some, applied linguistics is applying theoretical linguistics to actual data. Hence the construction of dictionaries or the collection of ‘corpora’ of millions of words of English are applied linguistics, as are the descriptions of social networks or of gender differences (but not usually descriptions of grammar). Once applied linguistics seemed boundless, including the study of first language acquisition and computational linguistics. To many, however, applied linguistics has become synonymous with SLA (though never linked to first language acquisition). SLA (Second Language Acquisition) research has had an enormous growth over the past decades. It enters into all of the above debates. Some people are concerned with classroom language acquisition because of its teaching implications, drawing mostly on psychological models of language and language processing and on social models of interaction and identity; others are concerned with SLA in natural settings. On another dimension, SLA can be seen as providing data to test out linguistic theories rather than to increase our knowledge of SLA itself; they are then more like linguists who happen to use SLA data than investigators of SLA in its own right. On a third dimension the linguistic world is more or less divided between those who see language as masses of things people have said and those who see it as knowledge in people’s minds. Some SLAresearchers analyse large corpora of learner’s utterances or essays; others test their ideas against the barest minimum of data; neither side really accept that the other has a valid point of view.

Applied linguistics then means many things to many people. Discovering what a book or a course in applied linguistics is about involves reading the small print to discover its orientation. Those with an interest in linguistic theory are going to feel frustrated when bombarded with classroom teaching techniques; those who want to handle large amounts of spoken or written data will be disappointed by single example sentences or experiments. Of course many people discover unexpected delights. One of my students who came to an MA course as an EFL course-writer ended up doing a Ph.D. thesis and book on learnability theory. This does not mean that most prospective MA students should not look very carefully, say checking the titles of the modules that actually make up the degree scheme, before they back a particular horse.


Available at: <http://www.viviancook.uk>.

Accessed on: November 2nd, 2018 (Adapted).

One thing that happens with the language teaching view of applied linguistics is that
Alternativas
Q1738999 Inglês

Text 


What is applied linguistics?

Vivian Cook, Newcastle University

Polish Translation 


If you tell someone you’re an applied linguist, they look at you with bafflement. If you amplify – it’s to do with linguistics – they still look baffled. You know, linguistics the science of language? Ah so you speak lots of languages? Well no, just English. So what do you actually do? Well I look at how people acquire languages and how we can teach them better. At last light begins to dawn and they tell you a story about how badly they were taught French at school.

The problem is that the applied linguists themselves don’t have much clearer ideas about what the subject consists of. They argue over whether it necessarily has anything to do with language teaching or with linguistics and whether it includes the actual description of language. All of these views exist among applied linguists and are reflected in the MA courses available at British universities under the label of applied linguistics.

The language teaching view of applied linguistics parallels TESOLorTEFL, by looking at ways of improving language teaching, backed by a more rigorous study of language. The motivation is that better teaching will be based on a better understanding of language. However, in British universities language teaching itself is not highly valued, often carried out by ancillary staff, because it does not lend itself easily to the kind of research publications that university careers now depend upon.

The closeness of the link to linguistics is also crucial. At one extreme you need the latest ideas hot from MIT on the principle that information about linguistics must be up-to-date – and linguistic theories change so fast that undergraduates discover their first year courses are out of date by their final year. It’s up to the end-users how they make practical use of the ideas, not the applied linguists.

This raises the issue whether other disciplines are as important as linguistics for applied linguistics. Psychology enters into many courses, as does education, particularly ideas about testing and about language learning. To some applied linguists the discipline draws on any subject with anything to say about language teaching or language learning. To others linguistics is the sole source of ideas. Sometime this is referred to as the issue of ‘autonomous applied linguistics’; is it a separate discipline or a poor relative of linguistics?

To some, applied linguistics is applying theoretical linguistics to actual data. Hence the construction of dictionaries or the collection of ‘corpora’ of millions To some, applied linguistics is applying theoretical linguistics to actual data. Hence the construction of dictionaries or the collection of ‘corpora’ of millions of words of English are applied linguistics, as are the descriptions of social networks or of gender differences (but not usually descriptions of grammar). Once applied linguistics seemed boundless, including the study of first language acquisition and computational linguistics. To many, however, applied linguistics has become synonymous with SLA (though never linked to first language acquisition). SLA (Second Language Acquisition) research has had an enormous growth over the past decades. It enters into all of the above debates. Some people are concerned with classroom language acquisition because of its teaching implications, drawing mostly on psychological models of language and language processing and on social models of interaction and identity; others are concerned with SLA in natural settings. On another dimension, SLA can be seen as providing data to test out linguistic theories rather than to increase our knowledge of SLA itself; they are then more like linguists who happen to use SLA data than investigators of SLA in its own right. On a third dimension the linguistic world is more or less divided between those who see language as masses of things people have said and those who see it as knowledge in people’s minds. Some SLAresearchers analyse large corpora of learner’s utterances or essays; others test their ideas against the barest minimum of data; neither side really accept that the other has a valid point of view.

Applied linguistics then means many things to many people. Discovering what a book or a course in applied linguistics is about involves reading the small print to discover its orientation. Those with an interest in linguistic theory are going to feel frustrated when bombarded with classroom teaching techniques; those who want to handle large amounts of spoken or written data will be disappointed by single example sentences or experiments. Of course many people discover unexpected delights. One of my students who came to an MA course as an EFL course-writer ended up doing a Ph.D. thesis and book on learnability theory. This does not mean that most prospective MA students should not look very carefully, say checking the titles of the modules that actually make up the degree scheme, before they back a particular horse.


Available at: <http://www.viviancook.uk>.

Accessed on: November 2nd, 2018 (Adapted).

A very important side of the teaching view of applied linguistics refers to the
Alternativas
Q1738981 Educação Física
O futsal é um esporte coletivo conhecido mundialmente e que vem evoluindo a cada dia. Trata-se de um esporte de ataque e contra-ataque, em que a exigência física é essencial, além da qualidade técnica individual e coletiva da equipe, que requer de seus praticantes uma grande versatilidade no que diz respeito à atuação no jogo.
Analise as afirmativas a seguir relativas aos modelos de marcação no futsal.
I. Marcação individual: tem como objetivo executar a ação de marcar de forma direta o oponente. Há duas formas de marcação individual, pressão parcial e pressão total. II. Marcação por zona ou espaço: ação de marcar um determinado espaço ou setor da quadra de jogo. III. Marcação mista: combina as ações de marcação individual e marcação homem a homem. IV. Marcação em linha: utilizada para marcar a saída de bola do adversário, caracterizando-se pelo adiantamento de todos os atletas no campo ofensivo de jogo, “sufocando” o adversário.
Estão corretas as afirmativas
Alternativas
Q1738978 Educação Física
O atletismo é uma modalidade esportiva que, historicamente, foi considerada como sendo a base de todas as demais, ou seja, por meio de suas exigências e trabalhos motores e físicos, possibilita que seus praticantes adquiram vivências que os preparam para os desafios cotidianos e também as vivências junto às demais modalidades e manifestações da cultura corporal de forma geral.
Em relação às corridas de revezamento no esporte atletismo, assinale a alternativa incorreta.
Alternativas
Q1738974 Educação Física
A Educação Física oferece uma série de possibilidades para enriquecer a experiência das crianças, jovens e adultos na Educação Básica, permitindo o acesso a um vasto universo cultural. Segundo a Base Comum Curricular Nacional (BNCC), na unidade temática ginásticas, são propostas práticas com formas de organização e significados muito diferentes.
A ginástica geral, também conhecida como ginástica para todos,
Alternativas
Q1738973 Educação Física
De acordo com os Parâmetros Curriculares Nacionais (PCN), “a concepção de cultura corporal amplia a contribuição da Educação Física escolar para o pleno exercício da cidadania, na medida em que, tomando seus conteúdos e as capacidades que se propõe a desenvolver como produtos socioculturais, afirma como direito de todos o acesso a eles”.
Com relação à Educação Física como cultura corporal, assinale a alternativa incorreta.
Alternativas
Q1738972 Pedagogia
Analise as seguintes afirmativas sobre a Base Nacional Comum Curricular e assinale com V as verdadeiras e com F as falsas.
( ) Na BNCC, a Educação Infantil está organizada em cinco áreas de conhecimento. Essas áreas, como aponta o Parecer CNE/CEB nº 11/2010, “favorecem a comunicação entre os conhecimentos e saberes dos diferentes componentes curriculares”. ( ) Na BNCC, cada objetivo de aprendizagem e desenvolvimento é identificado por um código alfanumérico e as habilidades expressam as aprendizagens essenciais que devem ser asseguradas aos alunos nos diferentes contextos escolares. ( ) Na BNCC, competência é definida como a mobilização de conhecimentos (conceitos e procedimentos), habilidades (práticas, cognitivas e socioemocionais), atitudes e valores para resolver demandas complexas da vida cotidiana, do pleno exercício da cidadania e do mundo do trabalho. ( ) Na BNCC, a organização curricular do Ensino Fundamental está estruturada em cinco campos de experiências, no âmbito dos quais são definidos os objetivos de aprendizagem e desenvolvimento.
Assinale a sequência correta.
Alternativas
Q1738971 Pedagogia
No Caderno 7 do PNAIC – Alfabetização Matemática na perspectiva do letramento – são explicadas as etapas de uma investigação matemática.
Quanto à exploração e à formulação de questões, assinale a alternativa correta.
Alternativas
Q1738970 Pedagogia
Conforme explicado por Frade (2005), métodos sintéticos baseiam-se no pressuposto de que a compreensão do sistema de escrita se faz sintetizando / juntando unidades menores, que são analisadas para estabelecer a relação entre a fala e sua representação escrita.
A esse respeito, assinale a alternativa que não apresenta um método sintético.
Alternativas
Q1738969 Pedagogia
Analise as seguintes afirmativas sobre as Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais da Educação Básica (BRASIL, 2013) e assinale com V as verdadeiras e com F as falsas.
( ) A formulação de Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais constitui atribuição federal, que é exercida pelo Conselho Nacional de Educação (CNE). ( ) A criação de Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais se deu em função de uma necessidade social e política para subsidiar as avaliações externas. ( ) As Diretrizes visam a estabelecer bases comuns nacionais para a Educação Infantil, o Ensino Fundamental, o Ensino Médio e o Ensino Superior. ( ) As Diretrizes apontam que a escola tem, diante de si, o desafio de sua própria recriação, pois tudo que a ela se refere constitui-se como invenção.
Assinale a sequência correta.
Alternativas
Q1738967 Pedagogia
Para Paulo Freire “ensinar exige a convicção de que a mudança é possível” (FREIRE, 2007).
Segundo sua obra Pedagogia da Autonomia
Alternativas
Q1738964 Pedagogia
Na obra A prática educativa: como ensinar, Antoni Zabala realiza uma divisão dos conteúdos em quatro tipos.
A esse respeito, numere a COLUNA II de acordo com a COLUNA I, fazendo a relação da tipologia do conteúdo com o seu respectivo conceito.
COLUNA I 1. Conteúdo atitudinal 2. Conteúdo conceitual 3. Conteúdo factual 4. Conteúdo procedimental
COLUNA II ( ) As atividades básicas para as sequências desse conteúdo deverão ter exercícios de repetição e ser executadas conforme a quantidade e a complexidade da informação, utilizando estratégias que reforcem as repetições mediante organizações significativas ou associações. ( ) Nesse caso o dado mais relevante é determinado pela necessidade de realizar exercícios suficientes e progressivos das diferentes ações, técnicas e estratégias que formam esse conteúdo. ( ) Nesse tipo de conteúdo o componente afetivo atua de forma determinante na aprendizagem, o que faz com que as atividades de ensino sejam muito mais complexas que as dos outros tipos de conteúdo. ( ) Esse tipo de conteúdo, por tratar de temas abstratos, requer uma compreensão do significado e, portanto, um processo de elaboração pessoal.
Assinale a sequência correta.

Alternativas
Q1738963 Pedagogia
De acordo com a Lei nº 9.394, de 20 de dezembro de 1996 e as alterações, oferecer a educação infantil em creches, pré-escolas e, com prioridade, no Ensino Fundamental, permitida a atuação em outros níveis de ensino somente quando estiverem atendidas plenamente as necessidades de sua área de competência e com recursos acima dos percentuais mínimos vinculados pela Constituição Federal à manutenção e ao desenvolvimento do ensino, é uma incumbência dos(da)
Alternativas
Q1738962 História
“Os cenários de guerra desdobraram-se pelo Atlântico, envolvendo portugueses, espanhóis e holandeses. Esses ocuparam o nordeste do Brasil em 1630 e em 1641 instalaram-se em Angola. [...] Os holandeses não se descuravam do outro lado do Atlântico. [...] Somente em 1637 o entreposto de São Jorge da Mina seria conquistado pela Companhia [...]. Iniciava-se, então, o envolvimento regular dos holandeses no tráfico negreiro, reforçado a partir de 1641, pela conquista de Luanda e de Benguela e dos portos satélites de São Tomé a Ano Bom. [...]”
SANTOS, M. N. dos; BICALHO, M. F.; GOUVÊA, M. F. “Guerras na Europa e reordenação político-administrativa”. In: FRAGOSO, João; GOUVÊA, Maria de Fátima. Coleção o Brasil Colonial, 1580-1720 – vol. 2. Rio de Janeiro: Civilização Brasileira, 2014, p. 545-6-7.
O contexto político europeu que explica as guerras e as conquistas descritas no trecho anterior está corretamente apresentado em:
Alternativas
Respostas
1: D
2: D
3: B
4: C
5: D
6: A
7: D
8: A
9: C
10: D
11: A
12: D
13: A
14: C
15: C
16: C
17: B
18: B
19: C
20: C