Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 704 questões.

2494574 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Gerência de Projetos
Banca: IF-SUL
Orgão: IF-SUL
No SketchUp, entre as configurações básicas inicias, a unidade de desenho é uma das mais importantes.
Que alternativa indica o caminho correto para essa definição?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2494566 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: IF-SUL
Orgão: IF-SUL
Technology in education: if students aren't worried, why are teachers?
As a new episode of My Teacher is an App airs on BBC Radio 4, Edward Lawless urges teachers to embrace digital technology in the classroom – however frightening it seems
Enunciado 3118722-1
"As teachers, our role must change to one that embraces digital technology as a fundamental part of student learning," says Edward Lawless. Photograph: Athena
The third episode of the BBC Radio 4 series, My Teacher is an App, offered a provocative glimpse into the ways that technology is now being used to meet current educational needs. I attended the debate at The Great Hall of King's College London, where a respected panel and an energetic audience discussed the future of online technology and education.
While students in the audience didn't think it was a big deal, not all of the educators saw technology and education flowing together so smoothly. There was some anxiety in the room about what would happen to "authentic teaching", whether online learning could really offer "meaningful activity" and "true engagement", and if social media could provide "real interaction". Then, of course, there was concern about what would become of "the human element" in a virtual classroom.
These are all valid concerns, but they represent the dangerous assumption that a "different" learning environment can't preserve cherished educational priorities. I have seen online courses that are committed to promoting authentic teaching and learning, and worked with "virtual" teachers who regularly offer meaningful engagement, bringing the "human element" to their students around the world.
On the other hand, I have also seen traditional secondary and university classrooms that disregard these same priorities, with "live" teachers and lecturers capable of automating instruction, objectifying and isolating students, and reducing education to the mere transfer of content.
No matter what the conditions may be – online or face-to-face – the quality of the educational experience depends on the integrity of the curriculum, the teacher and the learning community.
That said, it's normal that teachers and leaders find the integration of online technology in education frightening. First of all, our generation of "digital immigrant" teachers must shift out of our comfort zone and into the world of our "digital-native" students. Second, it requires bricks-and-mortar schools to take a leap of faith into a medium that's essentially an unknown world. They have to let go of the familiar model that we hold dear – not necessarily because it works so well, but because it's what we know so well – to embrace an educational medium that many of us don't use, don't understand and don't trust. Third, and most importantly, it requires us to shift the power of learning from the teacher to the student; to become the facilitator for learning rather than the deliverer of knowledge and in so doing, to let students lead their own learning. That is a very disturbing prospect for many educators – and parents – because it's all about relinquishing control and taking risks.
But the internet is a natural part of students' lives and for many of them it has been that way since before they could walk. It's their natural environment for watching movies and TV programmes, accessing music, communicating with friends and organising their daily lives. It's not surprising that these digital natives don't consider online learning as such a risky venture. The internet already empowers our students with unprecedented educational access in ways that we could never have foreseen as teachers in training. The question is – how are we teaching them to use that power?
At the close of the Radio 4 debate evening, one audience member remarked to the panel that we need to proceed with caution – our students could suffer if we are too bold in adopting online learning technologies. One panellist quietly responded that our students and our future will more likely suffer because we are too timid rather than too bold.
I couldn't agree more. As teachers, our role must change to one that enables, guides, personalises and embraces digital technology as a fundamental part of student learning. The most dangerous thing we can do to our students is to keep doing what our teachers and professors did to us:
!$ \bullet !$ Remain centre stage in a face-to-face classroom.
!$ \bullet !$ Ensure that every lesson goes according to our educational script.
!$ \bullet !$ Focus upon what we want all students to cover during a scheduled lesson rather than what each student needs to learn, when they need to learn it.
!$ \bullet !$ Keep overestimating our own importance in the teaching-learning dynamic and underestimating the potential of students to learn independently and collaboratively.
!$ \bullet !$ Maintain our roles as mediators of content rather than developing our students' capacities as discriminating, self-regulated learners in an open-source world.
It was good enough for us. Right?
Edward Lawless is the principal of Pamoja Education, an online provider of the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme
Available at: <http://www.theguardian.com/teacher-network/teacher-blog/2014/mar/10/
technology-education-students-teachers-worried> Consulted on Mar. 26th, 2014.
The words glimpse, mortar, relinquishing, and bold can be replaced, without changing their meaning in context, by
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Considerando que o resfriamento de uma xícara de café possa ser modelado pela função !$ T \, : \, R_+ \, \rightarrow \, R_+ !$, definida por !$ T(t) \, = \, 18 \, + \, 72e^{-0,05t} !$, sendo T medida em ºC e t em minutos, a temperatura média desse café ao logo dos 15 primeiros minutos de resfriamento é, aproximadamente, de
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2494495 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: TI - Banco de Dados
Banca: IF-SUL
Orgão: IF-SUL
Enunciado 3114778-1
A instrução correta para retornar o número de linhas após a execução da instrução SQL para listar todas as cidades é
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2494479 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: TI - Banco de Dados
Banca: IF-SUL
Orgão: IF-SUL
Considerando o SQL abaixo, assinale (V) para as alternativas verdadeiras e (F) para as falsas.
SELECT nome, CPF, estado
FROM funcionario
WHERE nome LIKE ‘%A%’
AND estado NOT IN (‘RS’,’SC’)
AND (CPF LIKE ‘%1%’
OR CPF LIKE ‘%2%’
OR CPF LIKE ‘%3%’)
ORDER BY estado DESC, nome ASC;
( ) A consulta exibirá nome, CPF e estado.
( ) A consulta retornará informações dos funcionários que têm seu nome iniciado pela letra A.
( ) A consulta mostrará os funcionários que possuem no CPF, simultaneamente, os números 1, 2 e 3.
( ) Os dados serão organizados em ordem descendente de nome e ascendente de estado.
( ) Não serão exibidos os dados dos funcionários do RS e de SC.
A sequência correta, de cima para baixo, é
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2494470 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Música
Banca: IF-SUL
Orgão: IF-SUL
Observe o trecho denominado TONALIDADES 3.
Enunciado 3113866-1
Os nomes das tonalidades que aparecem no trecho TONALIDADES 3 são:
I. Sol menor – Mi menor – Fá menor
II. Mi menor – Sol menor – Dó menor
III. Si menor – mi menor – Dó menor[i7]
Está(ão) correta(s) apenas a(s) tonalidade(s)
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2494459 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Engenharia Civil
Banca: IF-SUL
Orgão: IF-SUL
Os ensaios triaxiais adensados e não-drenados são caracterizados por:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2494417 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Administração Geral
Banca: IF-SUL
Orgão: IF-SUL
“O , ou investidor pessoa física, é um capitalista de risco que possui dinheiro e busca alternativas para obter melhor rentabilidade para esse dinheiro. Ele é quem coloca o seed money (dinheiro semente inicial) necessário para a criação de muitos negócios”.
(DORNELAS, 2008)
Qual a alternativa que completa corretamente a lacuna do conceito acima?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Dada a representação de cores em valores RGB (0 a 255), assinale a alternativa que contém somente cores conhecidas como “cores seguras web”, ou seja, que são independentes de navegador.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2494377 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: IF-SUL
Orgão: IF-SUL
Technology in education: if students aren't worried, why are teachers?
As a new episode of My Teacher is an App airs on BBC Radio 4, Edward Lawless urges teachers to embrace digital technology in the classroom – however frightening it seems
Enunciado 3099253-1
"As teachers, our role must change to one that embraces digital technology as a fundamental part of student learning," says Edward Lawless. Photograph: Athena
The third episode of the BBC Radio 4 series, My Teacher is an App, offered a provocative glimpse into the ways that technology is now being used to meet current educational needs. I attended the debate at The Great Hall of King's College London, where a respected panel and an energetic audience discussed the future of online technology and education.
While students in the audience didn't think it was a big deal, not all of the educators saw technology and education flowing together so smoothly. There was some anxiety in the room about what would happen to "authentic teaching", whether online learning could really offer "meaningful activity" and "true engagement", and if social media could provide "real interaction". Then, of course, there was concern about what would become of "the human element" in a virtual classroom.
These are all valid concerns, but they represent the dangerous assumption that a "different" learning environment can't preserve cherished educational priorities. I have seen online courses that are committed to promoting authentic teaching and learning, and worked with "virtual" teachers who regularly offer meaningful engagement, bringing the "human element" to their students around the world.
On the other hand, I have also seen traditional secondary and university classrooms that disregard these same priorities, with "live" teachers and lecturers capable of automating instruction, objectifying and isolating students, and reducing education to the mere transfer of content.
No matter what the conditions may be – online or face-to-face – the quality of the educational experience depends on the integrity of the curriculum, the teacher and the learning community.
That said, it's normal that teachers and leaders find the integration of online technology in education frightening. First of all, our generation of "digital immigrant" teachers must shift our comfort zone and the world of our "digital-native" students. Second, it requires bricks-and-mortar schools to take a leap of faith into a medium that's essentially an unknown world. They have to let go familiar model that we hold dear – not necessarily because it works so well, but because it's what we know so well – to embrace an educational medium that many of us don't use, don't understand and don't trust. Third, and most importantly, it requires us to shift the power of learning from the teacher to the student; to become the facilitator learning rather than the deliverer of knowledge and so doing, to let students lead their own learning. That is a very disturbing prospect for many educators – and parents – because it's all about relinquishing control and taking risks.
But the internet is a natural part of students' lives and for many of them it has been that way since before they could walk. It's their natural environment for watching movies and TV programmes, accessing music, communicating with friends and organising their daily lives. It's not surprising that these digital natives don't consider online learning as such a risky venture. The internet already empowers our students with unprecedented educational access in ways that we could never have foreseen as teachers in training. The question is – how are we teaching them to use that power?
At the close of the Radio 4 debate evening, one audience member remarked to the panel that we need to proceed with caution – our students could suffer if we are too bold in adopting online learning technologies. One panellist quietly responded that our students and our future will more likely suffer because we are too timid rather than too bold.
I couldn't agree more. As teachers, our role must change to one that enables, guides, personalises and embraces digital technology as a fundamental part of student learning. The most dangerous thing we can do to our students is to keep doing what our teachers and professors did to us:
!$ \bullet !$ Remain centre stage in a face-to-face classroom.
!$ \bullet !$ Ensure that every lesson goes according to our educational script.
!$ \bullet !$ Focus upon what we want all students to cover during a scheduled lesson rather than what each student needs to learn, when they need to learn it.
!$ \bullet !$ Keep overestimating our own importance in the teaching-learning dynamic and underestimating the potential of students to learn independently and collaboratively.
!$ \bullet !$ Maintain our roles as mediators of content rather than developing our students' capacities as discriminating, self-regulated learners in an open-source world.
It was good enough for us. Right?
Edward Lawless is the principal of Pamoja Education, an online provider of the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme
Available at: <http://www.theguardian.com/teacher-network/teacher-blog/2014/mar/10/
technology-education-students-teachers-worried> Consulted on Mar. 26th, 2014.
In line the correct sequence of particles that fill in the blanks in the text accordingly is
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas