Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 1.316 questões.

3321182 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Verbena
Orgão: IFS
During the history of England and the British Empire, experts have suggested many ways to classify English speakers. However, not all linguists agree on the best way to do this. For many sociolinguists, which is the most important and accurate model, proposed by Braj Kachru in 1988?
 

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3321181 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Verbena
Orgão: IFS
Dudley Evans and St. John (1998) in their book “Developments in ESP: a multidisciplinary approach” identify five key roles for the ESP practitioner. Among them are
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3321180 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Verbena
Orgão: IFS
Text 3
A teacher’s experience of using technology in language teaching
Published 29 October 2021
Using technology has always been an important part of my teaching, even in the pre-digital age. Like many early adopters, I get super-excited by the ‘wow’ factor of new technology. However, some technology (like VR – virtual reality) is still quite challenging to use successfully. In my own teaching, I’m happy to incorporate tools which are rather more familiar. (...)
Speaking My
EAP (English for Academic Purposes) students naturally use PowerPoint to deliver their presentations. The software is so familiar that they are unaware that they are using technology! Classes concentrate on strategies for making a talk effective, such as incorporating memorable images and reducing text to just key words. Many of my students have serious pronunciation difficulties, so revealing a word at the same time as saying it helps them to be understood by the audience.
Like many teachers, I like the engagement and interactivity afforded by Kahoot! My favourite voting app is Mentimeter because it is quick to create a poll, reliable and easy-to-use. Voting anonymously is significantly different from putting up your hand. Doing it remotely remains an exciting event – watching as students’ votes come in. A great way to finish a discussion lesson on controversial issues is with a class vote.
I encourage fluency in the classroom but also ask students to do more discrete practice away from the classroom using their mobile phones – recording themselves, listening and rerecording. They can try out voice searches which are hugely motivating when you achieve success! (...)
Vocabulary
Many of my new students don’t have a system to record and review the new vocabulary we cover in class. As part of their learner training, I present the app Quizlet which allows learners to create sets of digital flashcards. It’s free. Students who choose to try it can decide what to write on the back of a card – a translation or a personalised example sentence containing a new word. The app automatically creates games such as matching exercises and Pelmanism, which some learners enjoy.
I am a big fan of graphic organisers and have long encouraged students to use mind-maps. Having free versions such as Mindomo is beneficial in helping store words in concept groups and in reviewing new language.
SHARMA, P. A teacher’s experience of using technology in language teaching. World of Better Learning Blog. Available at: https://www.cambridge.org/elt/blog/2021/10/29/technology-language-teaching/. Access on: 20 may. 2024. [Adapted].
In the context of the passage, which common characteristic do PowerPoint, Kahoot, Mentimeter, mobile phones, Quizlet, Mindomo and Pelmanism share?
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3321179 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Verbena
Orgão: IFS
Text 3
A teacher’s experience of using technology in language teaching
Published 29 October 2021
Using technology has always been an important part of my teaching, even in the pre-digital age. Like many early adopters, I get super-excited by the ‘wow’ factor of new technology. However, some technology (like VR – virtual reality) is still quite challenging to use successfully. In my own teaching, I’m happy to incorporate tools which are rather more familiar. (...)
Speaking My
EAP (English for Academic Purposes) students naturally use PowerPoint to deliver their presentations. The software is so familiar that they are unaware that they are using technology! Classes concentrate on strategies for making a talk effective, such as incorporating memorable images and reducing text to just key words. Many of my students have serious pronunciation difficulties, so revealing a word at the same time as saying it helps them to be understood by the audience.
Like many teachers, I like the engagement and interactivity afforded by Kahoot! My favourite voting app is Mentimeter because it is quick to create a poll, reliable and easy-to-use. Voting anonymously is significantly different from putting up your hand. Doing it remotely remains an exciting event – watching as students’ votes come in. A great way to finish a discussion lesson on controversial issues is with a class vote.
I encourage fluency in the classroom but also ask students to do more discrete practice away from the classroom using their mobile phones – recording themselves, listening and rerecording. They can try out voice searches which are hugely motivating when you achieve success! (...)
Vocabulary
Many of my new students don’t have a system to record and review the new vocabulary we cover in class. As part of their learner training, I present the app Quizlet which allows learners to create sets of digital flashcards. It’s free. Students who choose to try it can decide what to write on the back of a card – a translation or a personalised example sentence containing a new word. The app automatically creates games such as matching exercises and Pelmanism, which some learners enjoy.
I am a big fan of graphic organisers and have long encouraged students to use mind-maps. Having free versions such as Mindomo is beneficial in helping store words in concept groups and in reviewing new language.
SHARMA, P. A teacher’s experience of using technology in language teaching. World of Better Learning Blog. Available at: https://www.cambridge.org/elt/blog/2021/10/29/technology-language-teaching/. Access on: 20 may. 2024. [Adapted].
From the activities described in the Speaking part, one can infer that the teacher
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3321178 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Verbena
Orgão: IFS
Text 3
A teacher’s experience of using technology in language teaching
Published 29 October 2021
Using technology has always been an important part of my teaching, even in the pre-digital age. Like many early adopters, I get super-excited by the ‘wow’ factor of new technology. However, some technology (like VR – virtual reality) is still quite challenging to use successfully. In my own teaching, I’m happy to incorporate tools which are rather more familiar. (...)
Speaking My
EAP (English for Academic Purposes) students naturally use PowerPoint to deliver their presentations. The software is so familiar that they are unaware that they are using technology! Classes concentrate on strategies for making a talk effective, such as incorporating memorable images and reducing text to just key words. Many of my students have serious pronunciation difficulties, so revealing a word at the same time as saying it helps them to be understood by the audience.
Like many teachers, I like the engagement and interactivity afforded by Kahoot! My favourite voting app is Mentimeter because it is quick to create a poll, reliable and easy-to-use. Voting anonymously is significantly different from putting up your hand. Doing it remotely remains an exciting event – watching as students’ votes come in. A great way to finish a discussion lesson on controversial issues is with a class vote.
I encourage fluency in the classroom but also ask students to do more discrete practice away from the classroom using their mobile phones – recording themselves, listening and rerecording. They can try out voice searches which are hugely motivating when you achieve success! (...)
Vocabulary
Many of my new students don’t have a system to record and review the new vocabulary we cover in class. As part of their learner training, I present the app Quizlet which allows learners to create sets of digital flashcards. It’s free. Students who choose to try it can decide what to write on the back of a card – a translation or a personalised example sentence containing a new word. The app automatically creates games such as matching exercises and Pelmanism, which some learners enjoy.
I am a big fan of graphic organisers and have long encouraged students to use mind-maps. Having free versions such as Mindomo is beneficial in helping store words in concept groups and in reviewing new language.
SHARMA, P. A teacher’s experience of using technology in language teaching. World of Better Learning Blog. Available at: https://www.cambridge.org/elt/blog/2021/10/29/technology-language-teaching/. Access on: 20 may. 2024. [Adapted].
In this blog post, the author
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3321177 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Verbena
Orgão: IFS
News Headlines
1. How will AI shape your future?
2. Will AI really take over our jobs?
3. Will AI makes us smarter?
4. How will AI impact generations to come?
Prepared by the author.
The future tense which is used in all the questions in the headlines expresses
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3321176 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Verbena
Orgão: IFS
News Headlines
1. How will AI shape your future?
2. Will AI really take over our jobs?
3. Will AI makes us smarter?
4. How will AI impact generations to come?
Prepared by the author.
A teacher decided to work with news headlines with her students in order to discuss the potential impacts of artificial intelligence (AI) on the world of work and on the future of the job market. Regarding this topic, which headline could be used to illustrate the worry about replacement of labor functions and professional stability?
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3321175 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Verbena
Orgão: IFS
Text 2
How English develops in the world is no business whatsoever of native speakers in England, the United States, or anywhere else. They have no say in the matter, no right to intervene or pass judgment. They are irrelevant. The very fact that English is an international language means that no nation can have custody over it. To grant such custody of the language is necessarily to arrest its development and so undermine its international status. It is a matter of considerable pride and satisfaction for native speakers of English that their language is an international means of communication. But the point is that it is only international to the extent that it is not their language. It is not a possession which they lease out to others, while retaining the freehold. Other people actually own it (Widdowson, 1994, p. 385).
KILICKAYA, F. World Englishes, English as an International Language and Applied Linguistics. English Language Teaching, Vol. 2, No. 3, 2009. Available at:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/42386333_World_Englishes_English . Access on: 21 may. 2024. [Adapted].
In the excerpt from the text "It is not a possession which they lease out to others, while retaining the freehold," what does the noun freehold mean?
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3321174 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Verbena
Orgão: IFS
Text 2
How English develops in the world is no business whatsoever of native speakers in England, the United States, or anywhere else. They have no say in the matter, no right to intervene or pass judgment. They are irrelevant. The very fact that English is an international language means that no nation can have custody over it. To grant such custody of the language is necessarily to arrest its development and so undermine its international status. It is a matter of considerable pride and satisfaction for native speakers of English that their language is an international means of communication. But the point is that it is only international to the extent that it is not their language. It is not a possession which they lease out to others, while retaining the freehold. Other people actually own it (Widdowson, 1994, p. 385).
KILICKAYA, F. World Englishes, English as an International Language and Applied Linguistics. English Language Teaching, Vol. 2, No. 3, 2009. Available at:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/42386333_World_Englishes_English . Access on: 21 may. 2024. [Adapted].
Regarding how English develops in the world, what can be inferred from the text?
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3321173 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Verbena
Orgão: IFS
According to Brown (2002), for much of the 20th century, the language teaching profession was focused on finding a single, ideal method that could effectively teach a foreign language in the classroom setting. By the 21st century, there was a move away from a one-size-fits-all approach in language teaching towards a more adaptable and studentcentered methodology. In the history of language teaching methods and approaches this movement is known as:
 

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