Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 40 questões.

Para a Teoria Histórico-Cultural, qual é a atividade principal das crianças em idade escolar?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Na teoria de aprendizagem Vigotskiana, o conceito que ajuda os professores a organizarem a atividade de ensino é conhecida como:
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
A respeito das teorias educacionais, estudos revelam que as pedagogias progressistas correspondem às teorias críticas à medida que compreendem a educação como processo:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

A necessidade de definição de Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais Gerais para a Educação Básica está posta pela emergência da atualização das políticas educacionais que consubstanciem o direito de todo brasileiro à formação humana e cidadã e à formação profissional, na vivência e convivência em ambiente educativo.

Tais Diretrizes têm por objetivos:

1. Sistematizar os princípios e diretrizes gerais da Educação Básica contidos na Constituição, na LDB e demais dispositivos legais, traduzindo-os em orientações que contribuam para assegurar a formação básica comum nacional, tendo como foco os sujeitos que dão vida ao currículo e à escola.

2. Estimular a reflexão crítica e propositiva que deve subsidiar a formulação, execução e avaliação do projeto político-pedagógico da escola de Educação Básica.

3. Orientar os cursos de formação inicial e continuada de profissionais – docentes, técnicos, funcionários – da Educação Básica, os sistemas educativos dos diferentes entes federados e as escolas que os integram, indistintamente da rede a que pertençam.

4. Contribuir com a formação de quadro docentes comprometidos com o processo de conformação dos corpos.

Assinale a alternativa que indica todas as afirmativas corretas.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Para a Teoria Histórico-Cultural, o processo de aprendizagem é sempre mediado por meio:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

Analise as afirmativas sobre a economia catarinense.

1. O Estado de Santa Catarina é um grande produtor de proteína animal.

2. As exportações catarinenses de carne suína e de frango estão em crescimento.

3. Não obstante ser grande exportador, o Estado de Santa Catarina não conseguiu ainda certificação de sanidade agropecuária, o que se torna um entrave para a ampliação do mercado.

4. Entre os principais mercados para o produto catarinense estão Japão, China e Arábia Saudita.

Assinale a alternativa que indica todas as afirmativas corretas.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

A criação de gado teve e tem um importante papel na economia da Região Oeste de Santa Catarina.

Assinale a alternativa que indica o episódio da nossa história em que esta atividade foi marcantemente decisiva.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1178927 Ano: 2018
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FEPESE
Orgão: Pref. Chapecó-SC
Provas:
Fair trade – but what’s in it for the world?
enunciado 1178927-1 The fair trade movement, which aims ensure that fair prices are paid to producers in developing countries, is one of the true global success stories recent decades. The International Fairtrade Certification Mark, a guarantee that producers are getting a fair price, has become one of the most recognizable logos the world, which 91 percent of customers associate positive values. When the logo first appeared in the UK, the country where the largest number of fair-trade products are sold, nobody expected that the number of certified products would grow from only 3 to over 4,500 in just 18 years. In 2011, people around the world spent more than 6.5 billion US dollars on fair- -trade certified goods, signifying a 12 percent increase in sales from the previous year. This was at a time when most market segments in the developed world were still shrinking or stagnating from the after effects of the 2008 banking crisis. Over 1.2 million farmers and workers living in 66 countries benefit from fair- -trade certification by being able to sell their products at competitive prices, to ensure sustainability.
enunciado 1178927-2 Fair-trade initiatives have been growing steadily since the late 1960s, when the fair trade movement started with only a handful of committed individuals in the West who believed there was an alternative to the exploitation of farmers and workers in the developing world. Fair trade ensures fair prices for suppliers, as well as payment of a premium that can be reinvested in the local communities (for example, in schools or sanitation) or in improving productivity. In India, for instance, a group of rice farmers used the premium to buy farm machinery, which meant a 30 percent improvement in production.
enunciado 1178927-3 As consumers look for, and recognize, the logo and purchase fair-trade products, they put pressure on companies and governments to do more for global welfare. They also put pressure on supermarkets to sell fair-trade goods at the same price as conventional products, shifting the extra costs involved from consumers to the corporations that collect the profits.
enunciado 1178927-4 Critics of the fair trade movement say it is still not doing enough. They stress that the key to long-term development is not in small local improvements, but in moving the developing world from the production of raw materials into processing them, which can bring in greater profit. There are already some signs of this happening. A group of tea growers in Kenya recently set up a processing factory to deliver the final products directly to their customers in the West. By switching from the export of raw tea to boxed fair-trade products, they achieved 500 percent higher profits.
enunciado 1178927-5 It is important to realize that, despite all of its benefits, the fair trade movement has its limitations. Some of the poorest farmers can’t afford to pay the certification fees required for each fair-trade initiative, while others work for big, multinational employers that are excluded from participating. Fair trade is certainly a step in the right direction, but there is a lot more we must continue to do in order to help people in the world’s poorest regions.
Which reading strategy a learner should use when he/she wants to read a text quickly to get the main idea of a text?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1178926 Ano: 2018
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FEPESE
Orgão: Pref. Chapecó-SC
Provas:
Fair trade – but what’s in it for the world?
enunciado 1178926-1 The fair trade movement, which aims ensure that fair prices are paid to producers in developing countries, is one of the true global success stories recent decades. The International Fairtrade Certification Mark, a guarantee that producers are getting a fair price, has become one of the most recognizable logos the world, which 91 percent of customers associate positive values. When the logo first appeared in the UK, the country where the largest number of fair-trade products are sold, nobody expected that the number of certified products would grow from only 3 to over 4,500 in just 18 years. In 2011, people around the world spent more than 6.5 billion US dollars on fair- -trade certified goods, signifying a 12 percent increase in sales from the previous year. This was at a time when most market segments in the developed world were still shrinking or stagnating from the after effects of the 2008 banking crisis. Over 1.2 million farmers and workers living in 66 countries benefit from fair- -trade certification by being able to sell their products at competitive prices, to ensure sustainability.
enunciado 1178926-2 Fair-trade initiatives have been growing steadily since the late 1960s, when the fair trade movement started with only a handful of committed individuals in the West who believed there was an alternative to the exploitation of farmers and workers in the developing world. Fair trade ensures fair prices for suppliers, as well as payment of a premium that can be reinvested in the local communities (for example, in schools or sanitation) or in improving productivity. In India, for instance, a group of rice farmers used the premium to buy farm machinery, which meant a 30 percent improvement in production.
enunciado 1178926-3 As consumers look for, and recognize, the logo and purchase fair-trade products, they put pressure on companies and governments to do more for global welfare. They also put pressure on supermarkets to sell fair-trade goods at the same price as conventional products, shifting the extra costs involved from consumers to the corporations that collect the profits.
enunciado 1178926-4 Critics of the fair trade movement say it is still not doing enough. They stress that the key to long-term development is not in small local improvements, but in moving the developing world from the production of raw materials into processing them, which can bring in greater profit. There are already some signs of this happening. A group of tea growers in Kenya recently set up a processing factory to deliver the final products directly to their customers in the West. By switching from the export of raw tea to boxed fair-trade products, they achieved 500 percent higher profits.
enunciado 1178926-5 It is important to realize that, despite all of its benefits, the fair trade movement has its limitations. Some of the poorest farmers can’t afford to pay the certification fees required for each fair-trade initiative, while others work for big, multinational employers that are excluded from participating. Fair trade is certainly a step in the right direction, but there is a lot more we must continue to do in order to help people in the world’s poorest regions.
In the following paragraph:
“A group of tea growers in Kenya recently set up a processing factory to deliver the final products directly to their customers in the West. By switching from the export of raw tea to boxed fair-trade products, they achieved 500 percent higher profits.”
The underlined words are examples of:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1178925 Ano: 2018
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FEPESE
Orgão: Pref. Chapecó-SC
Provas:
Fair trade – but what’s in it for the world?
enunciado 1178925-1 The fair trade movement, which aims ensure that fair prices are paid to producers in developing countries, is one of the true global success stories recent decades. The International Fairtrade Certification Mark, a guarantee that producers are getting a fair price, has become one of the most recognizable logos the world, which 91 percent of customers associate positive values. When the logo first appeared in the UK, the country where the largest number of fair-trade products are sold, nobody expected that the number of certified products would grow from only 3 to over 4,500 in just 18 years. In 2011, people around the world spent more than 6.5 billion US dollars on fair- -trade certified goods, signifying a 12 percent increase in sales from the previous year. This was at a time when most market segments in the developed world were still shrinking or stagnating from the after effects of the 2008 banking crisis. Over 1.2 million farmers and workers living in 66 countries benefit from fair- -trade certification by being able to sell their products at competitive prices, to ensure sustainability.
enunciado 1178925-2 Fair-trade initiatives have been growing steadily since the late 1960s, when the fair trade movement started with only a handful of committed individuals in the West who believed there was an alternative to the exploitation of farmers and workers in the developing world. Fair trade ensures fair prices for suppliers, as well as payment of a premium that can be reinvested in the local communities (for example, in schools or sanitation) or in improving productivity. In India, for instance, a group of rice farmers used the premium to buy farm machinery, which meant a 30 percent improvement in production.
enunciado 1178925-3 As consumers look for, and recognize, the logo and purchase fair-trade products, they put pressure on companies and governments to do more for global welfare. They also put pressure on supermarkets to sell fair-trade goods at the same price as conventional products, shifting the extra costs involved from consumers to the corporations that collect the profits.
enunciado 1178925-4 Critics of the fair trade movement say it is still not doing enough. They stress that the key to long-term development is not in small local improvements, but in moving the developing world from the production of raw materials into processing them, which can bring in greater profit. There are already some signs of this happening. A group of tea growers in Kenya recently set up a processing factory to deliver the final products directly to their customers in the West. By switching from the export of raw tea to boxed fair-trade products, they achieved 500 percent higher profits.
enunciado 1178925-5 It is important to realize that, despite all of its benefits, the fair trade movement has its limitations. Some of the poorest farmers can’t afford to pay the certification fees required for each fair-trade initiative, while others work for big, multinational employers that are excluded from participating. Fair trade is certainly a step in the right direction, but there is a lot more we must continue to do in order to help people in the world’s poorest regions.
The following words: ‘when’, ‘who’ and ‘which’ (paragraph 2), are classified as:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas