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Q297316 Modelagem de Processos de Negócio (BPM)
A técnica Lean, conforme o BPM-CBOK, é utilizada para visualizar o fluxo de valor de um processo, departamento ou organização. Assinale os sete desperdícios identificados no mapeamento da cadeia de valor pelo enfoque Lean:
Alternativas
Q297315 Modelagem de Processos de Negócio (BPM)
No processo de gerenciamento de desempenho do processo deve-se ter uma métrica e medição associadas ao trabalho ou saída do processo que é executado.
Identifique a alternativa abaixo que NÃO representa uma métrica e medições baseadas nas dimensões fundamentais:
Alternativas
Q297314 Modelagem de Processos de Negócio (BPM)
Selecione a alternativa que melhor complete a frase a seguir: "Conforme o BPM-CBOK frequentemente ______________________ são criadas(os) sem uma compreensão do porque existem ou são tão antiquadas(os) que não mais se aplicam, mas por causa da cultura organizacional ainda estão sendo seguidas(os)".

Alternativas
Q297313 Administração Geral
Na Cadeia de Valor proposta por Michael Porter as atividades primárias são as relacionadas com a criação ou transformação dos produtos e serviços tais como: __________, Operações, __________, Marketing e Vendas, e Serviço. Identifique a alternativa abaixo que melhor complete a frase anterior:
Alternativas
Q297312 Administração Geral
O ciclo de desenvolvimento que tem como foco a melhoria continua, também chamado de Deming, possui quatro passos. Identifique o elemento abaixo que NÃO pertence a esse ciclo:
Alternativas
Q297304 Pedagogia
Sobre as determinações da LDB sobre o Ensino Fundamental, considere as afirmações abaixo.
I. A lei prevê a avaliação contínua do aluno.
II. O ensino de uma língua estrangeira deve ter início no primeiro ano do Ensino Fundamental I.
III. A duração do Ensino Fundamental é de 4 anos, com carga horária diária de, no mínimo, 4 horas.

Está correto o que se afirma em
Alternativas
Q297302 Pedagogia
Analise as afirmativas abaixo.
I. As Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais, em virtude dos seus objetivos, estão dispensadas de prever elementos voltados para a Educação Ambiental.
II. Os sistemas de ensino devem promover as condições para que as instituições educacionais sejam espaços educadores sustentáveis.
III. Os sistemas de ensino e as instituições de pesquisa, em regime de colaboração, devem fomentar e divulgar estudos e experiências realizados na área da Educação Ambiental.

De acordo com o conteúdo da Resolução nº 2, de 15 de junho de 2012, que estabelece as Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais para a Educação Ambiental, está correto

Alternativas
Q297301 Pedagogia
Com base na Resolução nº 4, de 2 de outubro de 2009, que institui as Diretrizes Operacionais para o Atendimento Educacional Especializado na Educação Básica, assinale a alternativa que não apresenta uma atribuição do professor do Atendimento Educacional Especializado (AEE).
Alternativas
Q297300 Pedagogia
Considere os segmentos descritos abaixo.
I. Alunos com deficiência (com impedimentos de longo prazo de natureza física, intelectual, mental ou sensorial).
II. Alunos com transtornos globais do desenvolvimento (apresentam quadro de alterações no desenvolvimento neuropsicomotor ou comprometimento nas relações sociais, na comunicação ou estereotipias motoras).
III. Alunos com altas habilidades/superdotação (apresentam potencial elevado e grande envolvimento com as áreas do conhecimento humano, isoladas ou combinadas: intelectual, liderança, psicomotora, artes e criatividade).

Na Resolução nº 4, de 2 de outubro de 2009, que institui as Diretrizes Operacionais para o Atendimento Educacional Especializado na Educação Básica, modalidade Educação Especial, o público-alvo do Atendimento Educacional Especializado (AEE) é constituído
Alternativas
Q297299 Inglês
Choose the best alternative, according to the following situation described:
Situation: I left my bicycle here and now it's gone.
Alternativas
Q297298 Inglês
Read the following sentences I, II and III.
I. For sure I wouldn't know what to tell them if they showed up.
II. I must admit, I am a drug addicted.
III. I'm in terrible shape. I must exercise more, otherwise I'll be in trouble.

The alternative that respectively brings the meaning of each one is
Alternativas
Q297297 Inglês
Read the following sentences I, II, III: I.
I sent a letter to the airline company complaining about the problems I had during the flight and they have promised to look into the matter.
II. Although that doctor hasn't won the Nobel Prize, I look up to him.
III. I promised her that I would look after her kids if she weren't able to do that.

It's correct to say that the meaning of each underline bold phrasal verb is respectively
Alternativas
Q297296 Inglês
There's a missing connective in each of the following sentences I, II and III:
I. Brooke Ellison is a quadriplegic girl. _________ her difficulty, she remains active.
II. You had better write down her phone, _________ you won't be able to remember it.
III. You could attend the meeting _________ you don't accuse anyone.

The alternative that respectively brings the correct connective for each one is
Alternativas
Q297295 Inglês
Read the text and answer questions 19), 20), 21), 22), 23) and 24).

Lawsuits claim Knoedler made huge profits on fakes

For more than a dozen years the Upper East Side gallery Knoedler & Company was “substantially dependent” on profits it made from selling a mysterious collection of artwork that is at the center of a federal forgery investigation, former clients of this former gallery have charged in court papers. The analysis is based on financial records turned over as part of a lawsuit against the gallery filed by Domenico and Eleanore De Sole, who in 2004 paid $8.3 million for a painting attributed to Mark Rothko that they now say is a worthless fake. The Rothko is one of approximately 40 works that Knoedler, which closed last year, obtained from Glafira Rosales, a littleknown dealer whose collection of works attributed to Modernist masters has no documented provenance and is the subject of an F.B.I. investigation. Between 1996 and 2008, the suit asserts, Knoedler earned approximately $60 million from works that Ms. Rosales provided on consignment or sold outright to the gallery and cleared $40 million in profits. In one year, 2002, for example, the complaint says the gallery’s entire profit — $5.6 million — was derived from the sale of Ms. Rosales’s works. “Knoedler’s viability as a business was substantially — and, in some years, almost entirely — dependent on sales from the Rosales Collection,” the De Soles claimed last month in an amended version of the suit they filed this year. While the forgery allegations are well known and have been the subject of three federal lawsuits against Knoedler, the recent filings expand the known number of Rosales artworks that were handled by the gallery, which was in business for 165 years, and assert that they played a pivotal role in the gallery’s success. After the F.B.I. issued subpoenas to the gallery in the fall of 2009, Michael Hammer, Knoedler’s owner, halted the sale of any Rosales works. Knoedler ended up losing money that year and in 2010, the court papers say. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/22/arts/design/knoe... 

In the passage “The analysis is based on financial records turned over as part of a lawsuit against the gallery filed by Domenico and Eleanore De Sole" the meaning of the phrasal verb is
Alternativas
Q297294 Inglês
Read the text and answer questions 19), 20), 21), 22), 23) and 24).

Lawsuits claim Knoedler made huge profits on fakes

For more than a dozen years the Upper East Side gallery Knoedler & Company was “substantially dependent” on profits it made from selling a mysterious collection of artwork that is at the center of a federal forgery investigation, former clients of this former gallery have charged in court papers. The analysis is based on financial records turned over as part of a lawsuit against the gallery filed by Domenico and Eleanore De Sole, who in 2004 paid $8.3 million for a painting attributed to Mark Rothko that they now say is a worthless fake. The Rothko is one of approximately 40 works that Knoedler, which closed last year, obtained from Glafira Rosales, a littleknown dealer whose collection of works attributed to Modernist masters has no documented provenance and is the subject of an F.B.I. investigation. Between 1996 and 2008, the suit asserts, Knoedler earned approximately $60 million from works that Ms. Rosales provided on consignment or sold outright to the gallery and cleared $40 million in profits. In one year, 2002, for example, the complaint says the gallery’s entire profit — $5.6 million — was derived from the sale of Ms. Rosales’s works. “Knoedler’s viability as a business was substantially — and, in some years, almost entirely — dependent on sales from the Rosales Collection,” the De Soles claimed last month in an amended version of the suit they filed this year. While the forgery allegations are well known and have been the subject of three federal lawsuits against Knoedler, the recent filings expand the known number of Rosales artworks that were handled by the gallery, which was in business for 165 years, and assert that they played a pivotal role in the gallery’s success. After the F.B.I. issued subpoenas to the gallery in the fall of 2009, Michael Hammer, Knoedler’s owner, halted the sale of any Rosales works. Knoedler ended up losing money that year and in 2010, the court papers say. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/22/arts/design/knoe... 

The alternative that brings the best synonym to the bold underline idiom in the passage “Knoedler ended up losing money that year and in 2010" is
Alternativas
Q297293 Inglês
Read the text and answer questions 19), 20), 21), 22), 23) and 24).

Lawsuits claim Knoedler made huge profits on fakes

For more than a dozen years the Upper East Side gallery Knoedler & Company was “substantially dependent” on profits it made from selling a mysterious collection of artwork that is at the center of a federal forgery investigation, former clients of this former gallery have charged in court papers. The analysis is based on financial records turned over as part of a lawsuit against the gallery filed by Domenico and Eleanore De Sole, who in 2004 paid $8.3 million for a painting attributed to Mark Rothko that they now say is a worthless fake. The Rothko is one of approximately 40 works that Knoedler, which closed last year, obtained from Glafira Rosales, a littleknown dealer whose collection of works attributed to Modernist masters has no documented provenance and is the subject of an F.B.I. investigation. Between 1996 and 2008, the suit asserts, Knoedler earned approximately $60 million from works that Ms. Rosales provided on consignment or sold outright to the gallery and cleared $40 million in profits. In one year, 2002, for example, the complaint says the gallery’s entire profit — $5.6 million — was derived from the sale of Ms. Rosales’s works. “Knoedler’s viability as a business was substantially — and, in some years, almost entirely — dependent on sales from the Rosales Collection,” the De Soles claimed last month in an amended version of the suit they filed this year. While the forgery allegations are well known and have been the subject of three federal lawsuits against Knoedler, the recent filings expand the known number of Rosales artworks that were handled by the gallery, which was in business for 165 years, and assert that they played a pivotal role in the gallery’s success. After the F.B.I. issued subpoenas to the gallery in the fall of 2009, Michael Hammer, Knoedler’s owner, halted the sale of any Rosales works. Knoedler ended up losing money that year and in 2010, the court papers say. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/22/arts/design/knoe... 

Read the following passages:
The analysis is based on financial records turned over as part of a lawsuit against the gallery filed by Domenico and Eleanore De Sole, who in 2004 paid $8.3 million for a painting attributed to Mark Rothko that they now say is a worthless fake.
The Rothko is one of approximately 40 works that Knoedler, which closed last year, obtained from Glafira Rosales, a little- known dealer whose collection of works attributed to Modernist masters has no documented provenance and is the subject of an F.B.I. investigation.

The underlined bold words are
Alternativas
Q297292 Inglês
Read the text and answer questions 19), 20), 21), 22), 23) and 24).

Lawsuits claim Knoedler made huge profits on fakes

For more than a dozen years the Upper East Side gallery Knoedler & Company was “substantially dependent” on profits it made from selling a mysterious collection of artwork that is at the center of a federal forgery investigation, former clients of this former gallery have charged in court papers. The analysis is based on financial records turned over as part of a lawsuit against the gallery filed by Domenico and Eleanore De Sole, who in 2004 paid $8.3 million for a painting attributed to Mark Rothko that they now say is a worthless fake. The Rothko is one of approximately 40 works that Knoedler, which closed last year, obtained from Glafira Rosales, a littleknown dealer whose collection of works attributed to Modernist masters has no documented provenance and is the subject of an F.B.I. investigation. Between 1996 and 2008, the suit asserts, Knoedler earned approximately $60 million from works that Ms. Rosales provided on consignment or sold outright to the gallery and cleared $40 million in profits. In one year, 2002, for example, the complaint says the gallery’s entire profit — $5.6 million — was derived from the sale of Ms. Rosales’s works. “Knoedler’s viability as a business was substantially — and, in some years, almost entirely — dependent on sales from the Rosales Collection,” the De Soles claimed last month in an amended version of the suit they filed this year. While the forgery allegations are well known and have been the subject of three federal lawsuits against Knoedler, the recent filings expand the known number of Rosales artworks that were handled by the gallery, which was in business for 165 years, and assert that they played a pivotal role in the gallery’s success. After the F.B.I. issued subpoenas to the gallery in the fall of 2009, Michael Hammer, Knoedler’s owner, halted the sale of any Rosales works. Knoedler ended up losing money that year and in 2010, the court papers say. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/22/arts/design/knoe... 

According to the text, it's not correct to say that
Alternativas
Q297291 Inglês
Read the text and answer questions 19), 20), 21), 22), 23) and 24).

Lawsuits claim Knoedler made huge profits on fakes

For more than a dozen years the Upper East Side gallery Knoedler & Company was “substantially dependent” on profits it made from selling a mysterious collection of artwork that is at the center of a federal forgery investigation, former clients of this former gallery have charged in court papers. The analysis is based on financial records turned over as part of a lawsuit against the gallery filed by Domenico and Eleanore De Sole, who in 2004 paid $8.3 million for a painting attributed to Mark Rothko that they now say is a worthless fake. The Rothko is one of approximately 40 works that Knoedler, which closed last year, obtained from Glafira Rosales, a littleknown dealer whose collection of works attributed to Modernist masters has no documented provenance and is the subject of an F.B.I. investigation. Between 1996 and 2008, the suit asserts, Knoedler earned approximately $60 million from works that Ms. Rosales provided on consignment or sold outright to the gallery and cleared $40 million in profits. In one year, 2002, for example, the complaint says the gallery’s entire profit — $5.6 million — was derived from the sale of Ms. Rosales’s works. “Knoedler’s viability as a business was substantially — and, in some years, almost entirely — dependent on sales from the Rosales Collection,” the De Soles claimed last month in an amended version of the suit they filed this year. While the forgery allegations are well known and have been the subject of three federal lawsuits against Knoedler, the recent filings expand the known number of Rosales artworks that were handled by the gallery, which was in business for 165 years, and assert that they played a pivotal role in the gallery’s success. After the F.B.I. issued subpoenas to the gallery in the fall of 2009, Michael Hammer, Knoedler’s owner, halted the sale of any Rosales works. Knoedler ended up losing money that year and in 2010, the court papers say. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/22/arts/design/knoe... 

The suing against Knoedler & Company gallery was established by
Alternativas
Q297290 Inglês
Read the text and answer questions 19), 20), 21), 22), 23) and 24).

Lawsuits claim Knoedler made huge profits on fakes

For more than a dozen years the Upper East Side gallery Knoedler & Company was “substantially dependent” on profits it made from selling a mysterious collection of artwork that is at the center of a federal forgery investigation, former clients of this former gallery have charged in court papers. The analysis is based on financial records turned over as part of a lawsuit against the gallery filed by Domenico and Eleanore De Sole, who in 2004 paid $8.3 million for a painting attributed to Mark Rothko that they now say is a worthless fake. The Rothko is one of approximately 40 works that Knoedler, which closed last year, obtained from Glafira Rosales, a littleknown dealer whose collection of works attributed to Modernist masters has no documented provenance and is the subject of an F.B.I. investigation. Between 1996 and 2008, the suit asserts, Knoedler earned approximately $60 million from works that Ms. Rosales provided on consignment or sold outright to the gallery and cleared $40 million in profits. In one year, 2002, for example, the complaint says the gallery’s entire profit — $5.6 million — was derived from the sale of Ms. Rosales’s works. “Knoedler’s viability as a business was substantially — and, in some years, almost entirely — dependent on sales from the Rosales Collection,” the De Soles claimed last month in an amended version of the suit they filed this year. While the forgery allegations are well known and have been the subject of three federal lawsuits against Knoedler, the recent filings expand the known number of Rosales artworks that were handled by the gallery, which was in business for 165 years, and assert that they played a pivotal role in the gallery’s success. After the F.B.I. issued subpoenas to the gallery in the fall of 2009, Michael Hammer, Knoedler’s owner, halted the sale of any Rosales works. Knoedler ended up losing money that year and in 2010, the court papers say. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/22/arts/design/knoe... 

The alternative that brings the most comprehensive idea about the text is
Alternativas
Q297289 Estatística

Os “pesos" de vinte atletas estão distribuídos de acordo com a tabela abaixo:


Imagem associada para resolução da questão

Considerando a distribuição acima, assinale a alternativa que apresenta respectivamente os valores da média e da moda bruta:

Alternativas
Respostas
81: B
82: A
83: D
84: B
85: E
86: D
87: C
88: B
89: D
90: E
91: A
92: C
93: E
94: A
95: A
96: A
97: D
98: D
99: C
100: D