Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 70 questões.

1707340 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Segurança e Saúde no Trabalho (SST)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: BR Distribuidora
Provas:
A NR-17 e seu Manual de Aplicação apontam os critérios que podem justificar o desempenho de tarefas na postura de pé, que são:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1704974 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Medicina
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: BR Distribuidora
Provas:
Considere a tabela a seguir, que representa uma tabulação de dados de um teste diagnóstico.
Doentes Não Doentes
Teste positivo A B
Teste negativo C D
O resultado da expressão A/(A+B) representa o(a)
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Considere a suíte Microsoft Office 2003 para responder à questão.
Observe a figura da Barra de Ferramentas do aplicativo Word a seguir.
Enunciado 1704209-1
O botão de comando Enunciado 1704209-2, que está indicado na figura pela seta, refere-se a
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Considere a suíte Microsoft Office 2003 para responder à questão.
No aplicativo Excel, encontra-se, por padrão, no menu Inserir, o comando
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Considere a suíte Microsoft Office 2003 para responder à questão.

O texto a seguir foi marcado e copiado de um site na internet e, em seguida, colado em um documento do aplicativo Word.
Os sistemas numéricos binário, decimal, octal e hexadecimal possuem sua própria faixa de valores possíveis, e, cada um, uma aplicação específica dentro da Ciência da Computação.
Considere que as palavras sublinhadas nesse texto estão na coloração azul.
Nesse caso, essas palavras indicam a existência de um(a)
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1681031 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Medicina
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: BR Distribuidora
Provas:
A gestão eficaz do Serviço de Saúde, especialmente na Medicina Ocupacional, apresenta critérios multifatoriais.
A Norma OHSAS 18001:2007 auxilia a verificação dessas ações de gestão quando
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1670301 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Segurança e Saúde no Trabalho (SST)
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: BR Distribuidora
Provas:
A Norma Regulamentadora 32 estabelece
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1670284 Ano: 2011
Disciplina: Direito Sanitário
Banca: CESGRANRIO
Orgão: BR Distribuidora
Provas:
Algumas condutas dos planos de saúde são consideradas abusivas, quer do ponto de vista de suas cláusulas ou de sua prática.
A esse respeito, considere as afirmativas a seguir.
I - Cláusulas abusivas são aquelas intencionalmente formuladas para reduzir as obrigações do Plano de Saúde em detrimento do Consumidor.
II - Práticas abusivas são aquelas amparadas por uma cláusula contratual abusiva que causam, como resultado final, um desequilíbrio entre os direitos e obrigações sejam elas do contratado ou do contratante.
III - Cláusulas abusivas são disposições contratuais que ferem direta ou indiretamente normas legais ou princípios jurídicos, sejam elas inscritas em contratos de adesão ou em qualquer outro contrato de consumo.
Está correto APENAS o que se afirma em
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Skillset vs. Mindset: Which Will Get You the Job?
By Heather Huhman
There’s a debate going on among career experts about which is more important: skillset or mindset. While skills are certainly desirable for many positions, does having the right ones guarantee you’ll get the job?
What if you have the mindset to get the work accomplished, but currently lack certain skills requested by the employer? Jennifer Fremont-Smith, CEO of Smarterer, and Paul G. Stoltz, PhD, coauthor of Put Your Mindset to Work: The One Asset You Really Need to Win and Keep the Job You Love, recently sat down with U.S. News to sound off on this issue.
Heather: What is more important to today’s employers: skillset or mindset? Why?
Jennifer: For many jobs, skillset needs to come first. The employer absolutely must find people who have the hard skills to do whatever it is they are being hired to do. Programmers have to know how to program. Data analysts need to know how to crunch numbers in Excel. Marketers must know their marketing tools and software. Social media managers must know the tools of their trade like Twitter, Facebook, WordPress, and have writing and communication skills.
After the employers have identified candidates with these hard skills, they can shift their focus to their candidates’ mindsets - attitude, integrity, work ethic, personality, etc.
Paul: Mindset utterly trumps skillset.
Heather: Do you have any data or statistics to back up your argument?
Jennifer: Despite record high unemployment, many jobs sit empty because employers can’t find candidates with the right skills. In a recent survey cited in the Wall Street Journal, over 50 percent of companies reported difficulty finding applicants with the right skills. Companies are running lean and mean in this economy – they don’t have the time to train for those key skills.
Paul: [Co-author James Reed and I] asked tens of thousands of top employers worldwide this question: If you were hiring someone today, which would you pick, B) the person with the perfect skills and qualifications, but lacking the desired mindset, or A) the person with the desired mindset, but lacking the rest? Ninety-eight percent pick A. Add to this that 97 percent said it is more likely that a person with the right mindset will develop the right skillset, rather than the other way around.
Heather: How do you define skillset?
Jennifer: At Smarterer, we define skillset as the set of digital, social, and technical tools professionals use to be effective in the workforce. Professionals are rapidly accumulating these skills, and the tools themselves are proliferating and evolving – we’re giving people a simple, smart way for people to validate their skillset and articulate it to the world.
Heather: How do you define mindset?
Paul: We define mindset as “the lens through which you see and navigate life.” It undergirds and affects all that you think, see, believe, say, and do.
Heather: How can job seekers show they have the skillset employers are seeking throughout the entire hiring process?
Jennifer: At the beginning of the process, seekers can showcase the skills they have by incorporating them, such as their Smarterer scores, throughout their professional and personal brand materials. They should be articulating their skills in their resume, cover letter, LinkedIn profile, blog, website - everywhere they express their professional identity.
Heather: How can job seekers show they have the mindset employers are seeking throughout the entire hiring process?
Paul: One of the most head-spinning studies we did, which was conducted by an independent statistician showed that, out of 30,000 CVs/resumes, when you look at who gets the job and who does not:
A. The conventional wisdom fails (at best). None of the classic, accepted advice, like using action verbs or including hobbies/interests actually made any difference.
B. The only factor that made the difference was that those who had one of the 72 mindset qualities from our master model, articulated in their CV/resume, in a specific way, were three times as likely to get the job. Furthermore, those who had two or more of these statements, were seven times more likely to get the job, often over other more qualified candidates.
Available at: <http://money.usnews.com/money/blogs/outside-voices- -
careers/2011/08/26/skillset-vs-mindset-which-will-get-you-the-job>. Retrieved on: 17 Sept. 2011. Adapted.
In “Furthermore, those who had two or more of these statements were seven times more likely to get the job”, Furthermore can be substituted, without change in meaning, by
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Skillset vs. Mindset: Which Will Get You the Job?
By Heather Huhman
There’s a debate going on among career experts about which is more important: skillset or mindset. While skills are certainly desirable for many positions, does having the right ones guarantee you’ll get the job?
What if you have the mindset to get the work accomplished, but currently lack certain skills requested by the employer? Jennifer Fremont-Smith, CEO of Smarterer, and Paul G. Stoltz, PhD, coauthor of Put Your Mindset to Work: The One Asset You Really Need to Win and Keep the Job You Love, recently sat down with U.S. News to sound off on this issue.
Heather: What is more important to today’s employers: skillset or mindset? Why?
Jennifer: For many jobs, skillset needs to come first. The employer absolutely must find people who have the hard skills to do whatever it is they are being hired to do. Programmers have to know how to program. Data analysts need to know how to crunch numbers in Excel. Marketers must know their marketing tools and software. Social media managers must know the tools of their trade like Twitter, Facebook, WordPress, and have writing and communication skills.
After the employers have identified candidates with these hard skills, they can shift their focus to their candidates’ mindsets - attitude, integrity, work ethic, personality, etc.
Paul: Mindset utterly trumps skillset.
Heather: Do you have any data or statistics to back up your argument?
Jennifer: Despite record high unemployment, many jobs sit empty because employers can’t find candidates with the right skills. In a recent survey cited in the Wall Street Journal, over 50 percent of companies reported difficulty finding applicants with the right skills. Companies are running lean and mean in this economy – they don’t have the time to train for those key skills.
Paul: [Co-author James Reed and I] asked tens of thousands of top employers worldwide this question: If you were hiring someone today, which would you pick, B) the person with the perfect skills and qualifications, but lacking the desired mindset, or A) the person with the desired mindset, but lacking the rest? Ninety-eight percent pick A. Add to this that 97 percent said it is more likely that a person with the right mindset will develop the right skillset, rather than the other way around.
Heather: How do you define skillset?
Jennifer: At Smarterer, we define skillset as the set of digital, social, and technical tools professionals use to be effective in the workforce. Professionals are rapidly accumulating these skills, and the tools themselves are proliferating and evolving – we’re giving people a simple, smart way for people to validate their skillset and articulate it to the world.
Heather: How do you define mindset?
Paul: We define mindset as “the lens through which you see and navigate life.” It undergirds and affects all that you think, see, believe, say, and do.
Heather: How can job seekers show they have the skillset employers are seeking throughout the entire hiring process?
Jennifer: At the beginning of the process, seekers can showcase the skills they have by incorporating them, such as their Smarterer scores, throughout their professional and personal brand materials. They should be articulating their skills in their resume, cover letter, LinkedIn profile, blog, website - everywhere they express their professional identity.
Heather: How can job seekers show they have the mindset employers are seeking throughout the entire hiring process?
Paul: One of the most head-spinning studies we did, which was conducted by an independent statistician showed that, out of 30,000 CVs/resumes, when you look at who gets the job and who does not:
A. The conventional wisdom fails (at best). None of the classic, accepted advice, like using action verbs or including hobbies/interests actually made any difference.
B. The only factor that made the difference was that those who had one of the 72 mindset qualities from our master model, articulated in their CV/resume, in a specific way, were three times as likely to get the job. Furthermore, those who had two or more of these statements, were seven times more likely to get the job, often over other more qualified candidates.
Available at: <http://money.usnews.com/money/blogs/outside-voices- -
careers/2011/08/26/skillset-vs-mindset-which-will-get-you-the-job>. Retrieved on: 17 Sept. 2011. Adapted.
According to Jennifer Fremont-Smith,
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas