Questões de Vestibular PUC-MINAS 2014 para Vestibular

Foram encontradas 47 questões

Ano: 2014 Banca: PUC-MINAS Órgão: PUC-MINAS Prova: PUC-MINAS - 2014 - PUC-MINAS - Vestibular |
Q467565 Química
Assinale a reação mais lenta.

Alternativas
Ano: 2014 Banca: PUC-MINAS Órgão: PUC-MINAS Prova: PUC-MINAS - 2014 - PUC-MINAS - Vestibular |
Q467566 Química
20 mL de HCl 0,5 mol L-1 foram neutralizados por 10 mL de solução aquosa de NaOH. Qual foi a concentração dessa solução?
Alternativas
Ano: 2014 Banca: PUC-MINAS Órgão: PUC-MINAS Prova: PUC-MINAS - 2014 - PUC-MINAS - Vestibular |
Q467567 Química
Considerando-se que o indicador de pH Amarelo de Metilo é vermelho em pH inferior a 4 e amarelo em pH superior a 4, é CORRETO afirmar que esse indicador apresenta uma cor vermelha quando está em contato com:
Alternativas
Ano: 2014 Banca: PUC-MINAS Órgão: PUC-MINAS Prova: PUC-MINAS - 2014 - PUC-MINAS - Vestibular |
Q467569 Inglês
Read the following passage and choose the option which best completes each question, according to the
text:


                                                                                      Students Should Be Tested More, Not Less

    “Testing is terrible for learning”. This often repeated saying has become accepted as true without proof. Opposition to testing and its associated ills has led to an over-generalization of the word “test” and an unjustifiable reputation as the personification of all that is wrong with education.
    Henry Roediger, a cognitive psychologist at Washington University, compared test results of students who used common study methods — reading material, highlighting, and writing notes — with the results from students repeatedly tested on the same material. Roediger found that taking a test on material can have a greater positive effect on future retention of that material than spending an equivalent amount of time restudying it. Remarkably, this remains true “even when performance on the test is far from perfect and no feedback is given on missed information.”
    Some tests, however, are more effective in eliciting this positive effect than others. Standardized tests, like IQ tests, are designed to measure developed knowledge or abilities. They are “summative,” as they measure students’ sum total knowledge or ability at a fixed point in time. Summative tests are not intended to shape future teaching. “Formative assessments,” on the other hand, are designed to discover what students do and do not know in order to shape teaching. They are not meant to simply measure knowledge, but to expose gaps in knowledge so teachers may adjust future instruction accordingly. At the same time, students are alerted to these gaps, which allows them to shape their efforts to learn the information they missed.
    Roediger asserts that educators ought to be using formative assessments early and often in the classroom to strengthen learning throughout the unit rather than waiting until the end and giving a summative assessment.

((FROM: http://www.theatlantic.com. Acesso: 28/01/2014. Adapted.)





Henry Roediger concluded that taking a test can have a greater positive effect than spending an equivalent amount of time restudying a material even if
Alternativas
Ano: 2014 Banca: PUC-MINAS Órgão: PUC-MINAS Prova: PUC-MINAS - 2014 - PUC-MINAS - Vestibular |
Q467570 Inglês
Read the following passage and choose the option which best completes each question, according to the
text:


                                                                                      Students Should Be Tested More, Not Less

    “Testing is terrible for learning”. This often repeated saying has become accepted as true without proof. Opposition to testing and its associated ills has led to an over-generalization of the word “test” and an unjustifiable reputation as the personification of all that is wrong with education.
    Henry Roediger, a cognitive psychologist at Washington University, compared test results of students who used common study methods — reading material, highlighting, and writing notes — with the results from students repeatedly tested on the same material. Roediger found that taking a test on material can have a greater positive effect on future retention of that material than spending an equivalent amount of time restudying it. Remarkably, this remains true “even when performance on the test is far from perfect and no feedback is given on missed information.”
    Some tests, however, are more effective in eliciting this positive effect than others. Standardized tests, like IQ tests, are designed to measure developed knowledge or abilities. They are “summative,” as they measure students’ sum total knowledge or ability at a fixed point in time. Summative tests are not intended to shape future teaching. “Formative assessments,” on the other hand, are designed to discover what students do and do not know in order to shape teaching. They are not meant to simply measure knowledge, but to expose gaps in knowledge so teachers may adjust future instruction accordingly. At the same time, students are alerted to these gaps, which allows them to shape their efforts to learn the information they missed.
    Roediger asserts that educators ought to be using formative assessments early and often in the classroom to strengthen learning throughout the unit rather than waiting until the end and giving a summative assessment.

((FROM: http://www.theatlantic.com. Acesso: 28/01/2014. Adapted.)





The main objective of summative tests is to
Alternativas
Ano: 2014 Banca: PUC-MINAS Órgão: PUC-MINAS Prova: PUC-MINAS - 2014 - PUC-MINAS - Vestibular |
Q467571 Inglês
Read the following passage and choose the option which best completes each question, according to the
text:


                                                                                      Students Should Be Tested More, Not Less

    “Testing is terrible for learning”. This often repeated saying has become accepted as true without proof. Opposition to testing and its associated ills has led to an over-generalization of the word “test” and an unjustifiable reputation as the personification of all that is wrong with education.
    Henry Roediger, a cognitive psychologist at Washington University, compared test results of students who used common study methods — reading material, highlighting, and writing notes — with the results from students repeatedly tested on the same material. Roediger found that taking a test on material can have a greater positive effect on future retention of that material than spending an equivalent amount of time restudying it. Remarkably, this remains true “even when performance on the test is far from perfect and no feedback is given on missed information.”
    Some tests, however, are more effective in eliciting this positive effect than others. Standardized tests, like IQ tests, are designed to measure developed knowledge or abilities. They are “summative,” as they measure students’ sum total knowledge or ability at a fixed point in time. Summative tests are not intended to shape future teaching. “Formative assessments,” on the other hand, are designed to discover what students do and do not know in order to shape teaching. They are not meant to simply measure knowledge, but to expose gaps in knowledge so teachers may adjust future instruction accordingly. At the same time, students are alerted to these gaps, which allows them to shape their efforts to learn the information they missed.
    Roediger asserts that educators ought to be using formative assessments early and often in the classroom to strengthen learning throughout the unit rather than waiting until the end and giving a summative assessment.

((FROM: http://www.theatlantic.com. Acesso: 28/01/2014. Adapted.)





The words on the other hand in “Formative assessments, on the other hand,” (paragraph 3) conveys an idea of
Alternativas
Ano: 2014 Banca: PUC-MINAS Órgão: PUC-MINAS Prova: PUC-MINAS - 2014 - PUC-MINAS - Vestibular |
Q467572 Inglês
Read the following passage and choose the option which best completes each question, according to the
text:


                                                                                      Students Should Be Tested More, Not Less

    “Testing is terrible for learning”. This often repeated saying has become accepted as true without proof. Opposition to testing and its associated ills has led to an over-generalization of the word “test” and an unjustifiable reputation as the personification of all that is wrong with education.
    Henry Roediger, a cognitive psychologist at Washington University, compared test results of students who used common study methods — reading material, highlighting, and writing notes — with the results from students repeatedly tested on the same material. Roediger found that taking a test on material can have a greater positive effect on future retention of that material than spending an equivalent amount of time restudying it. Remarkably, this remains true “even when performance on the test is far from perfect and no feedback is given on missed information.”
    Some tests, however, are more effective in eliciting this positive effect than others. Standardized tests, like IQ tests, are designed to measure developed knowledge or abilities. They are “summative,” as they measure students’ sum total knowledge or ability at a fixed point in time. Summative tests are not intended to shape future teaching. “Formative assessments,” on the other hand, are designed to discover what students do and do not know in order to shape teaching. They are not meant to simply measure knowledge, but to expose gaps in knowledge so teachers may adjust future instruction accordingly. At the same time, students are alerted to these gaps, which allows them to shape their efforts to learn the information they missed.
    Roediger asserts that educators ought to be using formative assessments early and often in the classroom to strengthen learning throughout the unit rather than waiting until the end and giving a summative assessment.

((FROM: http://www.theatlantic.com. Acesso: 28/01/2014. Adapted.)





According to Roediger, to have a more effective learning educators should use
Alternativas
Respostas
15: D
16: C
17: A
18: C
19: B
20: D
21: B