Foram encontradas 280 questões.
De acordo com alguns cientistas, os protozoários podem ser classificados pela presença ou ausência de estruturas de locomoção. A este respeito, pode-se afirmar que:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
TEXTO I
Pisa 2018: mais de 10 mil estudantes participam do programa
Exame mensura desenvoltura na Leitura e conhecimentos em Matemática e Ciências Aplicadas
O Programa Internacional de Avaliação de Estudantes, o Pisa 2018, foi aplicado em 661 escolas brasileiras para até 33 estudantes que cursavam a partir do 7º ano do ensino fundamental e nascidos a partir de 2002. Os exames avaliaram o conhecimento em termos de Leitura, Matemática e Ciências Aplicadas e foram aplicados em mais de 80 países. Com isto, cerca de 13 mil pessoas participaram em todo o Brasil.
Apesar de o resultado ser disponibilizado apenas em 2019, o Pisa contribui para avaliar, a partir de parâmetros internacionais, a qualidade da educação e a iniciativa do estudante em buscar, interpretar e analisar conteúdos associados a situações que ultrapassam a esfera escolar. Nos países em geral, a maioria dos participantes têm 15 anos, idade em que é encerrada a educação básica obrigatória.
A leitura foi o tema do Pisa 2018. Diante da importância para o desenvolvimento do aluno, o universo escolar é importante por desenvolver diversas iniciativas que estimulam as competências associadas à leitura. “Através das atividades lúdicas, rodas de leitura dentre outras práticas, identificamos como o aluno está em seu processo de aprendizagem. Ele é incentivado a desenvolver sua autonomia, confiança e compreensão diante de situações do dia a dia que necessitam da leitura e da interpretação. Isto favorece o crescimento intelectual do aluno enquanto cidadão”, destaca a pedagoga Marina Rhein dos Reis.
Segundo o Instituto Nacional de Estudos e Pesquisas Educacionais Anísio Teixeira (Inep), “a proposta para esta área [de Leitura] foi de analisar o conhecimento dos estudantes tendo como base a diversidade de um mundo globalizado, incluindo as habilidades de leitura necessárias, na atualidade, para crescimento individual, sucesso educacional, participação econômica e cidadania”.
A criação de projetos literários que destaquem autores importantes, além dos clássicos da literatura nacional e internacional, ou a “simples” adoção de livros paradidáticos para trabalhar ao longo do ano são válidas. “A cada trimestre adotamos um livro paradidático!$ ^{(C)} !$ o qual servirá de base para atividades que resultam, entre outras, em apresentação de dança, pinturas e livros”, pontua Reis ao citar as atividades desenvolvidas no âmbito escolar.
As provas do Pisa também incluem questões sobre letramento financeiro para avaliar o conhecimento dos jovens no que tange a dinheiro e investimentos, bem como compreender os critérios adotados para a tomada de decisões que envolvam tais questões.
Fonte: Tunísia Cores - Ascom Educa Mais Brasil https://www.educamaisbrasil.com.br/educacao/noticias/pisa-2018-mais-de-10-mil estudantes-participam-doprograma Acesso em 01/09/2018.
Muitas palavras assumem novos significados, ou seja, podem ser usadas em sentido conotativo, figurado. Assinale a alternativa que transcreve uma passagem do texto na qual se encontra uma palavra usada em sentido conotativo.
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1538920
Ano: 2018
Disciplina: Direito Educacional e Tecnológico
Banca: ACEP
Orgão: Pref. Aracati-CE
Disciplina: Direito Educacional e Tecnológico
Banca: ACEP
Orgão: Pref. Aracati-CE
Provas:
Em relação à Educação Especial, o Plano Nacional de Educação (PNE) trouxe como meta:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1538282
Ano: 2018
Disciplina: TI - Redes de Computadores
Banca: ACEP
Orgão: Pref. Aracati-CE
Disciplina: TI - Redes de Computadores
Banca: ACEP
Orgão: Pref. Aracati-CE
Provas:
Sobre o TLS (Transport Layer Security), é correto afirmar que:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1537918
Ano: 2018
Disciplina: TI - Sistemas Operacionais
Banca: ACEP
Orgão: Pref. Aracati-CE
Disciplina: TI - Sistemas Operacionais
Banca: ACEP
Orgão: Pref. Aracati-CE
Provas:
Os sistemas operacionais Windows mais recentes, dispõem de versões 32 bits (também conhecidos como x86) e 64 bits (usualmente referenciado como x64). Sobre essas versões, é correto afirmar que:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
No aplicativo de banco de dados Microsoft Access® 2013 rodando sobre o Microsoft Windows 7®, ambos em Português do Brasil, em configuração padrão, é possível montar consultas através do “arrastar e soltar” (drag & drop) de tabelas e da criação gráfica de relacionamentos, como exemplificado a seguir.

Na aba de Design de consultas, o botão que habilita o modo de exibição que permite esse tipo de montagem de consultas é:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Texto I
A Diagnosis Update: A Young Woman’s Extreme Muscle Pain Persists
By Lisa Sanders, M.d.
In April, I shared the story of Angel, a 23-year-old woman who for nine years has suffered from repeated episodes of extreme muscle pain and injury. Although she has been hospitalized nearly 30 times and has seen numerous doctors!$ ^{(A)} !$, no one understands why this is happening to this otherwise-healthy young woman.
In an interview in the spring, Angel explained that she has had episodes of pain!$ ^{(B)} !$ in her muscles for as long as she can remember. As a child, she was told that they were just growing pains. But one night, at age 14, she suddenly developed excruciating pain in the muscles of her leg, worse than anything she had ever experienced before. Her parents rushed her to the hospital in her hometown, Las Vegas. Doctors there found that the pain was caused by the destruction of her muscle fibers — something known medically as rhabdomyolysis, or rhabdo. During this episode, as well as most of those that followed, her urine turned as dark as Coca-Cola, from pigments that make muscle red. This pigment, along with other byproducts of the destroyed muscle, are removed from the body through the kidneys, a process that can damage these essential organs.
There was nothing the hospital could do to stop the muscle breakdown. That process stopped on its own. But the hospitalization was essential; she needed intravenous fluids to flush out these destructive pieces of broken-down muscle to prevent any permanent injury to her kidneys.
Rhabdomyolysis is not an uncommon problem. Anything that destroys muscle tissue, like trauma or even excessive exertion, can cause some degree of rhabdo. And after that initial hospitalization, she and her parents were told that it was unlikely to happen again. But it did — over and over. It took several hospital admissions for her doctors to acknowledge that these episodes of muscle pain may represent some underlying disease.
Today, Angel has had dozens of admissions to her local hospital to be treated for her repeated episodes of muscle pain and rhabdomyolysis. She isn’t sure what triggers these painful crises. Sometimes it seems to be set off by illness. But other times, Angel has been ill and hasn’t been crippled by subsequent muscle pain. Other times, strenuous exercise might bring on the muscle pain and blackened urine. And yet she has been able to run and hike and play soccer many times without that happening.
I told Angel’s story four months ago and asked New York Times readers to help us find the cause of these terrible episodes of rhabdomyolysis. The results were amazing. Within hours, hundreds of individuals submitted their thoughts on possible diagnoses for Angel. Others offered sympathy and advice on how to manage her symptoms. Still others heard echoes of their own experiences in Angel’s story and wrote to share their stories and reassure Angel that she was not alone. Over the next few weeks more than 2,000 suggestions came to us.
Many readers offered recommendations on where to look for the underlying disease process. One of the most common observations was that this disorder, whatever it was, seemed to be genetic, as the first symptoms started so early in life. Others suggested that Angel’s symptoms could be a reaction to her environment — either her physical environment, or a food she ate or medications she was exposed to. Another popular approach was to suggest possible mechanisms underlying her disorder, of which autoimmune disease was the most common suggestion. And finally, a significant number of you suggested either specific diseases or classes of diseases. Of these, diseases affecting the processes that provide energy to muscles, disorders known as metabolic myopathies, were the most popular. Disorders caused by difficulties getting rid of the waste!$ ^{(C)} !$ products of cells, including diseases like porphyria, were also suggested!$ ^{(D)} !$.
Angel was surprised and moved by the response. She reached out to several individuals whose stories touched her. She also spoke with doctors and patients who suggested diseases they knew well through professional or personal experience.
I spoke to Angel recently, and she confessed that getting a diagnosis still seemed to her like a long shot. Until this year there were so many doctors, and so few answers. But she was excited by the many strong leads the crowdsourcing process brought to her. She is still following up on several with her doctors and the documentary team. It has been a nerve-racking process — so many ideas, so many possible answers — but she has been buoyed by the support she has had from everyone she has talked to. The results of Angel’s search and all the diagnostic twists and turns will be featured in the Netflix documentaries when they air next year.
In the meantime, life goes on. Just weeks after her story appeared here, Angel completed her studies to become a nurse. Her friends and family joined her as she received her nursing pin from Altierus College.
This Summer she passed the exam to get her nursing license, and she is now a nurse at Montevista Hospital in Las Vegas. Being a nurse is a goal she has worked toward for years, and she is relieved and proud. She is determined that the episodes of pain in her legs, arms and back will not keep her from being the nurse she has dreamed of becoming. She and her boyfriend, Mac, continue to work toward having a normal life. Recently they traveled to Seattle to visit friends and family. She will not allow this disease to limit her or define her. Still, she wants a diagnosis. She longs to understand what’s going on in her body and, if possible, to prevent the pain and destruction of her muscles.
If you have any suggestions, please share them in the comments section. Let me know what you think, and see if you can help Angel on her medical journey.
Available at:< https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/10/magazine/a-diagnosis-update-a-young-womans-extreme-muscle-pain-persists.html>.
Acess on: Aug. 10, 2018
Assinale a opção em que a construção verbal está na voz passiva.
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1536909
Ano: 2018
Disciplina: TI - Organização e Arquitetura dos Computadores
Banca: ACEP
Orgão: Pref. Aracati-CE
Disciplina: TI - Organização e Arquitetura dos Computadores
Banca: ACEP
Orgão: Pref. Aracati-CE
Provas:
Nas arquiteturas de PC mais comuns utilizadas atualmente, há o protagonismo do componente chamado placa mãe (do inglês motherboard). Esta placa recebe todos os demais componentes do microcomputador e orquestra suas operações. Nesta arquitetura, há um firmware persistente que é responsável pelo teste e pela inicialização do hardware, e que desencadeia a carga do sistema operacional. Este componente se chama:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Os quadrados !$ Q_0 !$, !$ Q_1 !$, !$ Q_2 !$, ... são tais que o lado de !$ Q_0 !$ mede 1cm e, para cada !$ n \geqslant 1 !$, a diagonal de !$ Q_n !$ tem comprimento 1cm maior que a diagonal de !$ Q_{n-1}.Sep_n !$ denota o perímetro de !$ Q_n !$, pode-se afirmar que:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Texto I
A Diagnosis Update: A Young Woman’s Extreme Muscle Pain Persists
By Lisa Sanders, M.d.
In April, I shared the story of Angel, a 23-year-old woman who for nine years has suffered from repeated episodes of extreme muscle pain and injury. Although she has been hospitalized nearly 30 times and has seen numerous doctors, no one understands why this is happening to this otherwise-healthy young woman.
In an interview in the spring, Angel explained that she has had episodes of pain in her muscles for as long as she can remember. As a child, she was told that they were just growing pains. But one night, at age 14, she suddenly developed excruciating pain in the muscles of her leg, worse than anything she had ever experienced before. Her parents rushed her to the hospital in her hometown, Las Vegas. Doctors there found that the pain was caused by the destruction of her muscle fibers — something known medically as rhabdomyolysis, or rhabdo. During this episode, as well as most of those that followed, her urine turned as dark as Coca-Cola, from pigments that make muscle red. This pigment, along with other byproducts of the destroyed muscle, are removed from the body through the kidneys, a process that can damage these essential organs.
There was nothing the hospital could do to stop the muscle breakdown. That process stopped on its own. But the hospitalization was essential; she needed intravenous fluids to flush out these destructive pieces of broken-down muscle to prevent any permanent injury to her kidneys.
Rhabdomyolysis is not an uncommon problem. Anything that destroys muscle tissue, like trauma or even excessive exertion, can cause some degree of rhabdo. And after that initial hospitalization, she and her parents were told that it was unlikely to happen again. But it did — over and over. It took several hospital admissions for her doctors to acknowledge that these episodes of muscle pain may represent some underlying disease.
Today, Angel has had dozens of admissions to her local hospital to be treated for her repeated episodes of muscle pain and rhabdomyolysis. She isn’t sure what triggers these painful crises. Sometimes it seems to be set off by illness. But other times, Angel has been ill and hasn’t been crippled by subsequent muscle pain. Other times, strenuous exercise might bring on the muscle pain and blackened urine. And yet she has been able to run and hike and play soccer many times without that happening.
I told Angel’s story four months ago and asked New York Times readers to help us find the cause of these terrible episodes of rhabdomyolysis. The results were amazing. Within hours, hundreds of individuals submitted their thoughts on possible diagnoses for Angel. Others offered sympathy and advice on how to manage her symptoms. Still others heard echoes of their own experiences in Angel’s story and wrote to share their stories and reassure Angel that she was not alone. Over the next few weeks more than 2,000 suggestions came to us.
Many readers offered recommendations on where to look for the underlying disease process. One of the most common observations was that this disorder, whatever it was, seemed to be genetic, as the first symptoms started so early in life. Others suggested that Angel’s symptoms could be a reaction to her environment — either her physical environment, or a food she ate or medications she was exposed to. Another popular approach was to suggest possible mechanisms underlying her disorder, of which autoimmune disease was the most common suggestion. And finally, a significant number of you suggested either specific diseases or classes of diseases. Of these, diseases affecting the processes that provide energy to muscles, disorders known as metabolic myopathies, were the most popular. Disorders caused by difficulties getting rid of the waste products of cells, including diseases like porphyria, were also suggested.
Angel was surprised and moved by the response. She reached out to several individuals whose stories touched her. She also spoke with doctors and patients who suggested diseases they knew well through professional or personal experience.
I spoke to Angel recently, and she confessed that getting a diagnosis still seemed to her like a long shot. Until this year there were so many doctors, and so few answers. But she was excited by the many strong leads the crowdsourcing process brought to her. She is still following up on several with her doctors and the documentary team. It has been a nerve-racking process — so many ideas, so many possible answers — but she has been buoyed by the support she has had from everyone she has talked to. The results of Angel’s search and all the diagnostic twists and turns will be featured in the Netflix documentaries when they air next year.
In the meantime, life goes on. Just weeks after her story appeared here, Angel completed her studies to become a nurse. Her friends and family joined her as she received her nursing pin from Altierus College.
This Summer she passed the exam to get her nursing license, and she is now a nurse at Montevista Hospital in Las Vegas. Being a nurse is a goal she has worked toward for years, and she is relieved and proud. She is determined that the episodes of pain in her legs, arms and back will not keep her from being the nurse she has dreamed of becoming. She and her boyfriend, Mac, continue to work toward having a normal life. Recently they traveled to Seattle to visit friends and family. She will not allow this disease to limit her or define her. Still, she wants a diagnosis. She longs to understand what’s going on in her body and, if possible, to prevent the pain and destruction of her muscles.
If you have any suggestions, please share them in the comments section. Let me know what you think, and see if you can help Angel on her medical journey.
Available at:< https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/10/magazine/a-diagnosis-update-a-young-womans-extreme-muscle-pain-persists.html>.
Acess on: Aug. 10, 2018
Se a frase “ She also spoke with doctors and patients who suggested diseases they knew well through professional [...]” fosse escrita no simple present, os verbos destacados seriam substituídos por:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Cadernos
Caderno Container