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Q1149484 Contabilidade de Custos
Em geral, todas organizações que produzem ou comercializam produtos ou serviços têm suas operações baseadas em algum processo de transformação. Este processo é caracterizado como um sistema que integra, entradas (inputs), saídas (outputs) e o processamento. Entender e monitorar cada uma das etapas que compõe este sistema é fundamental para a melhoria e otimização contínua do processo produtivo. Sobre as etapas que compõem o modelo de transformação, assinale a afirmativa INCORRETA.
Alternativas
Q1149483 Administração Geral
O planejamento é uma das funções administrativas mais importantes para as organizações, no entanto, é necessário também que sejam implementados os processos indispensáveis para garantir que os objetivos traçados no processo de planejamento sejam alcançados. Esta etapa é conhecida como “controle” e ocorre em todos os três níveis hierárquicos da organização. Tendo em vista a implementação do processo de controle, nos três níveis hierárquicos da organização, marque V para as afirmativas verdadeiras e F para as falsas. (  ) O controle no nível operacional é detalhado, específico e analítico. Possui uma extensão de curto prazo e aborda cada tarefa ou operação. (  ) O controle no nível tático ou gerencial é menos genérico e menos detalhado. Possui extensão de médio prazo e aborda cada unidade da empresa separadamente. (   ) O controle no nível estratégico é pouco detalhado. Possui extensão de curto a médio prazo e aborda cada tarefa ou operação. A sequência está correta em
Alternativas
Q1149482 Administração Geral
As organizações modernas estão inseridas em um ambiente onde as transformações ocorrem a todo momento, em um ritmo acelerado. Atuar neste contexto organizacional é um desafio para as empresas. Desta forma, espera‐se que o administrador possua as características necessárias para organizar, dirigir e controlar as organizações. Estas características comportamentais são conhecidas como “papéis do administrador”. Para Chiavenato apud Mintzberg (1973), os papéis do administrador são divididos em três categorias; assinale a afirmativa INCORRETA. 
Alternativas
Q1149481 Gestão de Pessoas
Dentre as diversas iniciativas desenvolvidas pelas organizações ao longo tempo para motivar as pessoas, a adoção de recompensas ou incentivos é uma das mais utilizadas. As organizações entenderam que é preciso criar alternativas com o objetivo de “manter as pessoas”, valorizando, desta forma, o bem mais valioso para as empresas – o capital humano. Tendo em vista os principais tipos de recompensas adotadas pelas empresas, relacione adequadamente as colunas a seguir. 1. Recompensas relacionadas ao objetivo empresarial. 2. Recompensas vinculadas ao tempo de serviço do funcionário. 3. Recompensas relacionadas com o desempenho claramente excepcional. 4. Recompensas relacionadas com resultados departamentais ou globais. ( ) Quantificáveis. Podem ser compartilhadas dentro do grupo, em termos de igual porcentagem com relação à base salarial de cada pessoa. É uma remuneração variável.     (  ) Exigem apenas uma diferenciação do desempenho de suas atribuições. É o aumento por mérito. (  ) A participação nos resultados anuais ou semestrais (lucro) é um exemplo desse critério.   (  ) São concedidas automaticamente em certos intervalos, como 5 ou 10 anos, desde que o funcionário não tenha tido um desempenho insatisfatório. Exemplos: quinquênios ou decênios. A sequência está correta em  
Alternativas
Q1149480 Administração Geral
A ocorrência de conflitos é comum nas organizações. Diferentes grupos e pessoas, com características e estilos, às vezes conflitantes, geram situações que devem ser administradas e desativadas, a fim de que a sua eclosão seja evitada. Considerando que os conflitos podem influenciar o ambiente organizacional, assinale a afirmativa que representa corretamente um efeito negativo.
Alternativas
Q1149479 Administração Geral
Qualquer organização somente consegue alcançar a sua atividade‐fim quando é suprida dos diversos recursos necessários para o seu correto funcionamento. Administrar uma organização de forma eficiente é saber identificar e lidar com os diversos tipos de recursos e dimensioná‐los para o atendimento de suas necessidades. Sobre os diferentes recursos organizacionais e suas respectivas características, assinale a afirmativa INCORRETA.
Alternativas
Q1149478 Administração Geral
sempre um grande desafio para as organizações a interação com os diversos componentes que fazem parte do ambiente externo, como os fornecedores, os clientes, outras empresas, órgãos governamentais, bem como as incertezas, os riscos e as oscilações de mercado. A ferramenta que as organizações possuem para lidar com estas relações, buscando com isso um planejamento, é a Estratégia Organizacional. São consideradas etapas que compõem a Administração Estratégica, EXCETO:
Alternativas
Q1149477 Administração Geral
A departamentalização torna‐se importante à medida que as organizações adquirem uma estrutura administrativa maior e mais complexa, com um maior número de processos e de funções, desta forma, é necessário que as diversas atividades sejam agrupadas, de forma homogênea, em departamentos ou divisões, levando a organização a alcançar uma maior eficiência e economia em suas operações. Sobre os diferentes tipos de departamentalização, assinale a afirmativa INCORRETA.
Alternativas
Q1149472 Conhecimentos Gerais
O trecho a seguir contextualiza o tema tratado na questão. Leia‐o atentamente.

“Primeira delegada especial para mulheres, Rosmary Corrêa conta que o equipamento foi a primeira política pública direcionada a vítimas de violência no Brasil. ‘A ideia era oferecer um espaço diferenciado para a mulher, que seria atendida por outras mulheres, para que ela ficasse mais à vontade para falar a respeito desse assunto’, lembra. Hoje, existem nove delegacias da mulher somente na capital paulista e 130 em todo o estado. A partir da criação da delegacia, o governo passou a ter ciência e a enxergar a violência sofrida pelas mulheres, tanto agressões físicas quanto discriminações e ofensas. Para atendê‐las integralmente, criou‐se um setor de assistência social, dentro da própria delegacia, além de um abrigo para mulheres que não podiam voltar para casa por medo de serem mortas pelo marido. ‘Tudo começou a aparecer depois que se mostrou a realidade que muitas mulheres viviam dentro de casa’, afirma Rosmary.”  
(Disponível em: http://agenciabrasil.ebc.com.br/direitos‐humanos/noticia/2015‐08/ha‐30‐anos‐delegacia‐da‐mulher‐deu‐inicio‐politicas‐de‐ combate.)
“Primeiro sucessor da presidente Dilma Rousseff na hierarquia do governo executivo federal, __________________ era o secretário de Segurança do Estado de ____________________ responsável pela criação da primeira Delegacia de Defesa da Mulher, no centro da capital.” Assinale a alternativa que completa correta e sequencialmente a afirmativa anterior
Alternativas
Q1149471 Inglês

Read the text to answer 


On Education, Republican Candidates Retreat From National Standards


                                                                                                  BY EMILY CADEI 8/20/15 AT 4:40 AM

       


           After 15 years of rising federal involvement in K through 12 schools, U.S. education policy is poised for a big shift in direction. If that wasn’t already apparent, it certainly became clear on Wednesday, when six of the Republican party’s leading 2016 contenders spoke about their views on educating America’s youth, and what their priorities would be should they make it to the White House. The consensus: national‐level reform efforts are out. Ceding control to state and local school districts is in.

     That’s always been the preference for some segments of the Republican party. But under President George W. Bush, a crop of GOP leaders interested in business‐backed education reforms banded together with Democrats eager to expand public funding for schools, particularly for underachieving schools, to carve out a more assertive federal role. That coalition helped pass the 2001 law known as No Child Left Behind, which set national standards for schools and used federal funding to create incentives to meet them.

      Though there is now broad agreement that parts of No Child Left Behind were ill‐conceived, the Obama administration has continued Bush’s muscular approach to education, prodding states to participate in national programs with offers of federal cash. But that coalition of Democratic and Republican reformers is now looking wobbly. The House and Senate have both passed updated versions of No Child Left Behind that would rein in the federal government’s role in setting K through 12 education policy, though not nearly as much as conservatives would like. The next step is reconciling differences between the bills in a way that keeps the more conservative House happy, without jeopardizing President Barack Obama’s signature. That’s going to be a tough task for Congress this fall. On the presidential trail, Democrats like Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders have made clear that they side with teachers’ unions who are critics of expanding charter schools and more teacher accountability, which both Bush and Obama tried to promote nationally.

      On the Republican side, meanwhile, the six candidates who spoke at the American Federation for Children’s Education Summit 2015 in New Hampshire fell all over themselves trying distance their agendas from current education policies and declare their support for local autonomy.

                                                                      

                                                                                (Available: http://www.newsweek.com/education)

According to use in context, POLICY (3rd par) does NOT mean:
Alternativas
Q1149470 Inglês

Read the text to answer 


On Education, Republican Candidates Retreat From National Standards


                                                                                                  BY EMILY CADEI 8/20/15 AT 4:40 AM

       


           After 15 years of rising federal involvement in K through 12 schools, U.S. education policy is poised for a big shift in direction. If that wasn’t already apparent, it certainly became clear on Wednesday, when six of the Republican party’s leading 2016 contenders spoke about their views on educating America’s youth, and what their priorities would be should they make it to the White House. The consensus: national‐level reform efforts are out. Ceding control to state and local school districts is in.

     That’s always been the preference for some segments of the Republican party. But under President George W. Bush, a crop of GOP leaders interested in business‐backed education reforms banded together with Democrats eager to expand public funding for schools, particularly for underachieving schools, to carve out a more assertive federal role. That coalition helped pass the 2001 law known as No Child Left Behind, which set national standards for schools and used federal funding to create incentives to meet them.

      Though there is now broad agreement that parts of No Child Left Behind were ill‐conceived, the Obama administration has continued Bush’s muscular approach to education, prodding states to participate in national programs with offers of federal cash. But that coalition of Democratic and Republican reformers is now looking wobbly. The House and Senate have both passed updated versions of No Child Left Behind that would rein in the federal government’s role in setting K through 12 education policy, though not nearly as much as conservatives would like. The next step is reconciling differences between the bills in a way that keeps the more conservative House happy, without jeopardizing President Barack Obama’s signature. That’s going to be a tough task for Congress this fall. On the presidential trail, Democrats like Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders have made clear that they side with teachers’ unions who are critics of expanding charter schools and more teacher accountability, which both Bush and Obama tried to promote nationally.

      On the Republican side, meanwhile, the six candidates who spoke at the American Federation for Children’s Education Summit 2015 in New Hampshire fell all over themselves trying distance their agendas from current education policies and declare their support for local autonomy.

                                                                      

                                                                                (Available: http://www.newsweek.com/education)

It is correct about the text that:
Alternativas
Q1149469 Inglês

Read the text to answer 


The nature of approaches and methods in language teaching


        Although specific theories of the language may provide the basis for a particular teaching method, other methods derive primarily from a theory of language learning. A learning theory underlying an approach or method responds to two questions: (a) What are the psycholinguistic and cognitive processes involved in language learning? and (b) What are the conditions that need to be met in order for these learning processes to be activated? Learning theories associated with a method at the level of approach may emphasize either one or both of these dimensions. Process‐ oriented theories build on learning processes, such as habit formation, induction, inferencing, hypothesis testing, and generalization. Condition‐oriented theories emphasize the nature of the human and physical context in which language learning takes place.  

        Stephen D. Krashen’s Monitor Model of second language development (1981) is an example of a learning theory on which a method (the Natural Approach) has been built. At the level of process, Krashen distinguishes between acquisition and learning. Acquisition refers to the natural assimilation of language rules through using language for communication. Learning refers to the formal study of language rules and is a conscious process. Krashen’s theory also addresses the conditions necessary for the process of “acquisition” to take place. He describes these in terms of the type of “input” the learner receives. Input must be comprehensible, slightly above the learner’s present level of competence, interesting or relevant, not grammatically sequenced, in sufficient quantity, and experience in low‐anxiety contexts.

         Tracy Terrell’s Natural Approach (1977) is an example of a method derived primarily from a learning theory rather than from a particular view of language. Although the Natural approach is based on a learning theory that specifies both processes and conditions, the learning theory underlying such methods as Counseling‐Learning and the Silent Way addresses primarily the conditions held to be necessary for learning to take place without specifying what the learning processes themselves are presumed to be.

          Charles A. Curran in his writings on the Counseling‐Learning (1972), for example, focuses on the conditions necessary for successful learning. James Asher’s Total Physical Response (Asher 1977) is likewise a method that derives from a learning theory. Caleb Gattemo’s Silent Way (1972, 1976) is built around a theory of the conditions necessary for successful learning to be realized. Many of the techniques used in the method are designed to train learners to consciously use their intelligence to heighten learning potencial.


(Richards, Jack C. and Rodgers, Theodore S. Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching. 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press, 2004. P. 22‐23. Adapted.)

The noun whose plural form follows the same pattern of “approaches” is:
Alternativas
Q1149468 Inglês

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The nature of approaches and methods in language teaching


        Although specific theories of the language may provide the basis for a particular teaching method, other methods derive primarily from a theory of language learning. A learning theory underlying an approach or method responds to two questions: (a) What are the psycholinguistic and cognitive processes involved in language learning? and (b) What are the conditions that need to be met in order for these learning processes to be activated? Learning theories associated with a method at the level of approach may emphasize either one or both of these dimensions. Process‐ oriented theories build on learning processes, such as habit formation, induction, inferencing, hypothesis testing, and generalization. Condition‐oriented theories emphasize the nature of the human and physical context in which language learning takes place.  

        Stephen D. Krashen’s Monitor Model of second language development (1981) is an example of a learning theory on which a method (the Natural Approach) has been built. At the level of process, Krashen distinguishes between acquisition and learning. Acquisition refers to the natural assimilation of language rules through using language for communication. Learning refers to the formal study of language rules and is a conscious process. Krashen’s theory also addresses the conditions necessary for the process of “acquisition” to take place. He describes these in terms of the type of “input” the learner receives. Input must be comprehensible, slightly above the learner’s present level of competence, interesting or relevant, not grammatically sequenced, in sufficient quantity, and experience in low‐anxiety contexts.

         Tracy Terrell’s Natural Approach (1977) is an example of a method derived primarily from a learning theory rather than from a particular view of language. Although the Natural approach is based on a learning theory that specifies both processes and conditions, the learning theory underlying such methods as Counseling‐Learning and the Silent Way addresses primarily the conditions held to be necessary for learning to take place without specifying what the learning processes themselves are presumed to be.

          Charles A. Curran in his writings on the Counseling‐Learning (1972), for example, focuses on the conditions necessary for successful learning. James Asher’s Total Physical Response (Asher 1977) is likewise a method that derives from a learning theory. Caleb Gattemo’s Silent Way (1972, 1976) is built around a theory of the conditions necessary for successful learning to be realized. Many of the techniques used in the method are designed to train learners to consciously use their intelligence to heighten learning potencial.


(Richards, Jack C. and Rodgers, Theodore S. Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching. 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press, 2004. P. 22‐23. Adapted.)

In “Krashen’s theory also… to take place.” (2nd par) TAKE PLACE means:
Alternativas
Q1149467 Inglês

Read the text to answer 


The nature of approaches and methods in language teaching


        Although specific theories of the language may provide the basis for a particular teaching method, other methods derive primarily from a theory of language learning. A learning theory underlying an approach or method responds to two questions: (a) What are the psycholinguistic and cognitive processes involved in language learning? and (b) What are the conditions that need to be met in order for these learning processes to be activated? Learning theories associated with a method at the level of approach may emphasize either one or both of these dimensions. Process‐ oriented theories build on learning processes, such as habit formation, induction, inferencing, hypothesis testing, and generalization. Condition‐oriented theories emphasize the nature of the human and physical context in which language learning takes place.  

        Stephen D. Krashen’s Monitor Model of second language development (1981) is an example of a learning theory on which a method (the Natural Approach) has been built. At the level of process, Krashen distinguishes between acquisition and learning. Acquisition refers to the natural assimilation of language rules through using language for communication. Learning refers to the formal study of language rules and is a conscious process. Krashen’s theory also addresses the conditions necessary for the process of “acquisition” to take place. He describes these in terms of the type of “input” the learner receives. Input must be comprehensible, slightly above the learner’s present level of competence, interesting or relevant, not grammatically sequenced, in sufficient quantity, and experience in low‐anxiety contexts.

         Tracy Terrell’s Natural Approach (1977) is an example of a method derived primarily from a learning theory rather than from a particular view of language. Although the Natural approach is based on a learning theory that specifies both processes and conditions, the learning theory underlying such methods as Counseling‐Learning and the Silent Way addresses primarily the conditions held to be necessary for learning to take place without specifying what the learning processes themselves are presumed to be.

          Charles A. Curran in his writings on the Counseling‐Learning (1972), for example, focuses on the conditions necessary for successful learning. James Asher’s Total Physical Response (Asher 1977) is likewise a method that derives from a learning theory. Caleb Gattemo’s Silent Way (1972, 1976) is built around a theory of the conditions necessary for successful learning to be realized. Many of the techniques used in the method are designed to train learners to consciously use their intelligence to heighten learning potencial.


(Richards, Jack C. and Rodgers, Theodore S. Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching. 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press, 2004. P. 22‐23. Adapted.)

Write T (true) or F (false) to choose the item.



(     ) The Silent Way looks down on the need for enhancing learning potencial.  


(     ) Learning happens when content is not grammatically sequenced.


(     ) An approach is supported by a learning theory which discloses language learning processes.


(     ) Learning and acquiring a language are distinct processes in the Monitor Model.  


(     ) The Silent Way, the Counseling‐Learning, and the Natural Approach aim primarily at applied procedures.  

Alternativas
Q1149466 Inglês

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Communicative strategies


     As anyone who has tried to communicate in an L2 knows, learners frequently experience problems in saying what they want to say because of their inadequate knowledge. If learners do not know a word in the target language they may “borrow” a word from their L1 or use another target‐language word that is approximate in meaning, or try to paraphrase the meaning of the word, or even construct an entirely new word. These strategies, with the obvious exception of those that are L1 based, are also found in the language use of native speakers.

     There have been a number of attempts to construct psycholinguistic models to account for the use of communication strategies. Claus Faerch and Gabriele Kasper, for example, proposed a model of speech production which involves a planning and an execution phase. Communication strategies are seen as part of the planning phase.They are called upon when learners experience some kind of problem with an initial plan which prevents them from executing it. They can either abandon the initial plan and develop an enterily different one by means of reduction strategy (such as switching to a different topic) or try to maintain their original communicative goal by adopting some kind of achievement strategy (such as L1 borrowing).

      As Selinker has pointed out, communication strategies constitute one of the processes responsible for learner errors. We might expect, therefore, that the choice of communication strategies will reflect the learners’ stage of development. For example, learners might expect to switch from L1‐based strategies to L2‐based strategies as their knowledge of the L2 develops. It would also be interesting to discover whether the use of communication strategies has any effect on L2 acquisition. For example, do learners notice the gap more readily as a result of having to use a communication strategy? Or does successful use of a communication strategy obviate the need for learners to pick out the correct target‐language forms?  


(ELLIS, Rod. Second Language Acquisition. Oxford University, 1997. P.60‐61. Adapted.)  

Therefore (line 14, 3rd par) means:
Alternativas
Q1149465 Inglês

Read the text to answer 

Communicative strategies


     As anyone who has tried to communicate in an L2 knows, learners frequently experience problems in saying what they want to say because of their inadequate knowledge. If learners do not know a word in the target language they may “borrow” a word from their L1 or use another target‐language word that is approximate in meaning, or try to paraphrase the meaning of the word, or even construct an entirely new word. These strategies, with the obvious exception of those that are L1 based, are also found in the language use of native speakers.

     There have been a number of attempts to construct psycholinguistic models to account for the use of communication strategies. Claus Faerch and Gabriele Kasper, for example, proposed a model of speech production which involves a planning and an execution phase. Communication strategies are seen as part of the planning phase.They are called upon when learners experience some kind of problem with an initial plan which prevents them from executing it. They can either abandon the initial plan and develop an enterily different one by means of reduction strategy (such as switching to a different topic) or try to maintain their original communicative goal by adopting some kind of achievement strategy (such as L1 borrowing).

      As Selinker has pointed out, communication strategies constitute one of the processes responsible for learner errors. We might expect, therefore, that the choice of communication strategies will reflect the learners’ stage of development. For example, learners might expect to switch from L1‐based strategies to L2‐based strategies as their knowledge of the L2 develops. It would also be interesting to discover whether the use of communication strategies has any effect on L2 acquisition. For example, do learners notice the gap more readily as a result of having to use a communication strategy? Or does successful use of a communication strategy obviate the need for learners to pick out the correct target‐language forms?  


(ELLIS, Rod. Second Language Acquisition. Oxford University, 1997. P.60‐61. Adapted.)  

The item whose usage pattern differs from the other items is

Alternativas
Q1149464 Inglês

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Communicative strategies


     As anyone who has tried to communicate in an L2 knows, learners frequently experience problems in saying what they want to say because of their inadequate knowledge. If learners do not know a word in the target language they may “borrow” a word from their L1 or use another target‐language word that is approximate in meaning, or try to paraphrase the meaning of the word, or even construct an entirely new word. These strategies, with the obvious exception of those that are L1 based, are also found in the language use of native speakers.

     There have been a number of attempts to construct psycholinguistic models to account for the use of communication strategies. Claus Faerch and Gabriele Kasper, for example, proposed a model of speech production which involves a planning and an execution phase. Communication strategies are seen as part of the planning phase.They are called upon when learners experience some kind of problem with an initial plan which prevents them from executing it. They can either abandon the initial plan and develop an enterily different one by means of reduction strategy (such as switching to a different topic) or try to maintain their original communicative goal by adopting some kind of achievement strategy (such as L1 borrowing).

      As Selinker has pointed out, communication strategies constitute one of the processes responsible for learner errors. We might expect, therefore, that the choice of communication strategies will reflect the learners’ stage of development. For example, learners might expect to switch from L1‐based strategies to L2‐based strategies as their knowledge of the L2 develops. It would also be interesting to discover whether the use of communication strategies has any effect on L2 acquisition. For example, do learners notice the gap more readily as a result of having to use a communication strategy? Or does successful use of a communication strategy obviate the need for learners to pick out the correct target‐language forms?  


(ELLIS, Rod. Second Language Acquisition. Oxford University, 1997. P.60‐61. Adapted.)  

The learners’ stage of development
Alternativas
Q1149463 Inglês

Read the text to answer 

Communicative strategies


     As anyone who has tried to communicate in an L2 knows, learners frequently experience problems in saying what they want to say because of their inadequate knowledge. If learners do not know a word in the target language they may “borrow” a word from their L1 or use another target‐language word that is approximate in meaning, or try to paraphrase the meaning of the word, or even construct an entirely new word. These strategies, with the obvious exception of those that are L1 based, are also found in the language use of native speakers.

     There have been a number of attempts to construct psycholinguistic models to account for the use of communication strategies. Claus Faerch and Gabriele Kasper, for example, proposed a model of speech production which involves a planning and an execution phase. Communication strategies are seen as part of the planning phase.They are called upon when learners experience some kind of problem with an initial plan which prevents them from executing it. They can either abandon the initial plan and develop an enterily different one by means of reduction strategy (such as switching to a different topic) or try to maintain their original communicative goal by adopting some kind of achievement strategy (such as L1 borrowing).

      As Selinker has pointed out, communication strategies constitute one of the processes responsible for learner errors. We might expect, therefore, that the choice of communication strategies will reflect the learners’ stage of development. For example, learners might expect to switch from L1‐based strategies to L2‐based strategies as their knowledge of the L2 develops. It would also be interesting to discover whether the use of communication strategies has any effect on L2 acquisition. For example, do learners notice the gap more readily as a result of having to use a communication strategy? Or does successful use of a communication strategy obviate the need for learners to pick out the correct target‐language forms?  


(ELLIS, Rod. Second Language Acquisition. Oxford University, 1997. P.60‐61. Adapted.)  

It is true about the text that:
Alternativas
Q1149462 Inglês

Read the text to answer 

Communicative strategies


     As anyone who has tried to communicate in an L2 knows, learners frequently experience problems in saying what they want to say because of their inadequate knowledge. If learners do not know a word in the target language they may “borrow” a word from their L1 or use another target‐language word that is approximate in meaning, or try to paraphrase the meaning of the word, or even construct an entirely new word. These strategies, with the obvious exception of those that are L1 based, are also found in the language use of native speakers.

     There have been a number of attempts to construct psycholinguistic models to account for the use of communication strategies. Claus Faerch and Gabriele Kasper, for example, proposed a model of speech production which involves a planning and an execution phase. Communication strategies are seen as part of the planning phase.They are called upon when learners experience some kind of problem with an initial plan which prevents them from executing it. They can either abandon the initial plan and develop an enterily different one by means of reduction strategy (such as switching to a different topic) or try to maintain their original communicative goal by adopting some kind of achievement strategy (such as L1 borrowing).

      As Selinker has pointed out, communication strategies constitute one of the processes responsible for learner errors. We might expect, therefore, that the choice of communication strategies will reflect the learners’ stage of development. For example, learners might expect to switch from L1‐based strategies to L2‐based strategies as their knowledge of the L2 develops. It would also be interesting to discover whether the use of communication strategies has any effect on L2 acquisition. For example, do learners notice the gap more readily as a result of having to use a communication strategy? Or does successful use of a communication strategy obviate the need for learners to pick out the correct target‐language forms?  


(ELLIS, Rod. Second Language Acquisition. Oxford University, 1997. P.60‐61. Adapted.)  

In “They are called upon when learners…it” CALL UPON means:
Alternativas
Q1149459 Raciocínio Lógico

Analise a seguinte sequência lógica numérica:


4, 16, 15, 3, 18, 17, 5, 17,...                                                                        


Considerando que essa sequência possui 10 termos, a soma dos últimos dois termos é

Alternativas
Respostas
301: B
302: B
303: C
304: D
305: D
306: B
307: B
308: C
309: A
310: C
311: C
312: B
313: D
314: C
315: A
316: B
317: D
318: B
319: D
320: C