Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 40 questões.

3973517 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FEPESE
Orgão: Pref. Joaçaba-SC
Provas:
De acordo com a Base Nacional Comum Curricular (BNCC), os gêneros textuais em Língua Inglesa são fundamentais para o desenvolvimento da competência comunicativa, intercultural e crítica.
Analise as afirmativas abaixo sobre os gêneros textuais.
1. Os gêneros textuais são formas socialmente reconhecidas de uso da linguagem, que cumprem funções comunicativas em contextos reais.
2. Trabalhar com gêneros textuais nas aulas de língua inglesa, tem como objetivo principal o desenvolvimento da competência comunicativa e intercultural por meio de práticas reais de linguagem.
3. Os gêneros textuais devem ser considerados a materialização das várias práticas educacionais que permeiam a sociedade, articulados de tal forma que são imprescindíveis à vida em sociedade.
4. O gênero textual ‘news article’ tem como objetivo convencer o leitor a recontar experiências pessoais.
Assinale a alternativa que indica todas as afirmativas corretas.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3973516 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FEPESE
Orgão: Pref. Joaçaba-SC
Provas:
Vocabulary study: Match column 2 with the correct meanings of the words from the text in column 1.
Column 1 Words 1. a backlash 2. a pact 3. surplus 4. figures 5. an unethical act

Column 2 Meanings ( ) excess; extra; oversupply. ( ) numbers. ( ) a strong negative reaction by a large number of people. ( ) an action that is morally wrong. ( ) a formal agreement between parties.

Choose the alternative which presents the correct sequence, from top to bottom.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3973515 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FEPESE
Orgão: Pref. Joaçaba-SC
Provas:

Reading Comprehension

Modern supermarkets


Many of the major supermarket chains have come under fire with accusations of various unethical acts over the past decade. They’ve wasted loads of food, they’ve underpaid their suppliers and they’ve contributed to excessive plastic waste in their packaging, which has had its impact on our environment.

But supermarkets and grocers are starting to sit up and take notice. In response to growing consumer backlash against the huge amounts of plastic waste generated by plastic packaging, some of the largest UK supermarkets have signed up to a pact promising to transform packaging and cut plastic wastage. In a pledge to reuse, recycle or compost all plastic wastage by 2025, supermarkets are now beginning to take some responsibility for the part they play in contributing to the damage to our environment, with one major supermarket announcing their plan to eliminate all plastic packaging in their own-brand products by 2023.


In response to criticisms over food waste, some supermarkets are donating some of their food surplus. However, charities estimate that they are only accessing two per cent of supermarkets’ total food surplus, so this hardly seems to be solving the problem. Some say that supermarkets are simply not doing enough. Most supermarkets operate under a veil of secrecy when asked for exact figures of food wastage, and without more transparency it is hard to come up with a systematic approach to avoiding waste and to redistributing surplus food.


Some smaller companies are now taking matters into their own hands and offering consumers a greener, more environmentally friendly option. Shops like Berlin’s Original Unverpakt and London’s Bulk Market are plastic-free shops that have opened in recent years, encouraging customers to use their own containers or compostable bags. Online grocer Farmdrop eliminates the need for large warehouses and the risk of huge food surplus by delivering fresh produce from local farmers to its customers on a daily basis via electric cars, offering farmers the lion’s share of the retail price.


There is no doubt that we still have a long way to go in reducing food waste and plastic waste. But perhaps the major supermarkets might take inspiration from these smaller grocers and gradually move towards a more sustainable future for us all.

(adapted from www.britishcouncil.org)

Read the following paragraph about supermarkets:
Two of the things that major supermarkets have been ................................ for are the waste of large amounts of excess food and unnecessary plastic usage in a lot of product packaging. Some supermarkets have ................................ to try and reduce plastic wastage, and one supermarket has said that it would get ................................ of all plastic packaging from its own in-house brands. Meanwhile, many supermarkets are not very transparent about the exact amount of food that is going to waste and so it’s hard for charities to know how to redistribute this surplus .................................
Select the alternative that correctly completes the blanks in the sentence.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3973514 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FEPESE
Orgão: Pref. Joaçaba-SC
Provas:

Reading Comprehension

Modern supermarkets


Many of the major supermarket chains have come under fire with accusations of various unethical acts over the past decade. They’ve wasted loads of food, they’ve underpaid their suppliers and they’ve contributed to excessive plastic waste in their packaging, which has had its impact on our environment.

But supermarkets and grocers are starting to sit up and take notice. In response to growing consumer backlash against the huge amounts of plastic waste generated by plastic packaging, some of the largest UK supermarkets have signed up to a pact promising to transform packaging and cut plastic wastage. In a pledge to reuse, recycle or compost all plastic wastage by 2025, supermarkets are now beginning to take some responsibility for the part they play in contributing to the damage to our environment, with one major supermarket announcing their plan to eliminate all plastic packaging in their own-brand products by 2023.


In response to criticisms over food waste, some supermarkets are donating some of their food surplus. However, charities estimate that they are only accessing two per cent of supermarkets’ total food surplus, so this hardly seems to be solving the problem. Some say that supermarkets are simply not doing enough. Most supermarkets operate under a veil of secrecy when asked for exact figures of food wastage, and without more transparency it is hard to come up with a systematic approach to avoiding waste and to redistributing surplus food.


Some smaller companies are now taking matters into their own hands and offering consumers a greener, more environmentally friendly option. Shops like Berlin’s Original Unverpakt and London’s Bulk Market are plastic-free shops that have opened in recent years, encouraging customers to use their own containers or compostable bags. Online grocer Farmdrop eliminates the need for large warehouses and the risk of huge food surplus by delivering fresh produce from local farmers to its customers on a daily basis via electric cars, offering farmers the lion’s share of the retail price.


There is no doubt that we still have a long way to go in reducing food waste and plastic waste. But perhaps the major supermarkets might take inspiration from these smaller grocers and gradually move towards a more sustainable future for us all.

(adapted from www.britishcouncil.org)

Study these sentences and decide if they are true ( T ) or false ( F ), according to the text.
( ) More and more people want supermarkets to reduce the amount of plastic waste they produce.
( ) By 2025, many of the major supermarkets will have stopped using plastic in their in-house products.
( ) Supermarkets are still denying that plastic packaging can cause damage to our environment.
( ) Supermarkets are not telling people how much food they are actually wasting.
Choose the alternative which presents the correct sequence, from top to bottom.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3973513 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FEPESE
Orgão: Pref. Joaçaba-SC
Provas:

Reading Comprehension

Modern supermarkets


Many of the major supermarket chains have come under fire with accusations of various unethical acts over the past decade. They’ve wasted loads of food, they’ve underpaid their suppliers and they’ve contributed to excessive plastic waste in their packaging, which has had its impact on our environment.

But supermarkets and grocers are starting to sit up and take notice. In response to growing consumer backlash against the huge amounts of plastic waste generated by plastic packaging, some of the largest UK supermarkets have signed up to a pact promising to transform packaging and cut plastic wastage. In a pledge to reuse, recycle or compost all plastic wastage by 2025, supermarkets are now beginning to take some responsibility for the part they play in contributing to the damage to our environment, with one major supermarket announcing their plan to eliminate all plastic packaging in their own-brand products by 2023.


In response to criticisms over food waste, some supermarkets are donating some of their food surplus. However, charities estimate that they are only accessing two per cent of supermarkets’ total food surplus, so this hardly seems to be solving the problem. Some say that supermarkets are simply not doing enough. Most supermarkets operate under a veil of secrecy when asked for exact figures of food wastage, and without more transparency it is hard to come up with a systematic approach to avoiding waste and to redistributing surplus food.


Some smaller companies are now taking matters into their own hands and offering consumers a greener, more environmentally friendly option. Shops like Berlin’s Original Unverpakt and London’s Bulk Market are plastic-free shops that have opened in recent years, encouraging customers to use their own containers or compostable bags. Online grocer Farmdrop eliminates the need for large warehouses and the risk of huge food surplus by delivering fresh produce from local farmers to its customers on a daily basis via electric cars, offering farmers the lion’s share of the retail price.


There is no doubt that we still have a long way to go in reducing food waste and plastic waste. But perhaps the major supermarkets might take inspiration from these smaller grocers and gradually move towards a more sustainable future for us all.

(adapted from www.britishcouncil.org)

Analyze the sentences below about the text.
1. There is a grocer in Berlin that doesn’t allow customers to use their own containers.
2. Farmdrop doesn’t store large amounts of food and so doesn’t produce unnecessary waste.
3. Farmers supplying food to Farmdrop get a small fraction of the price that customers pay.
4. The author believes that small shops like Bulk Market and Farmdrop will eventually take over the major supermarkets.
Choose the alternative which contains the correct affirmatives.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Um dos princípios da Lei de Diretrizes e Bases da Educação Nacional, LDB (1996) é que:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
De acordo com a Lei nº 13.005/2014, cabe aos gestores federais, estaduais, municipais e do Distrito Federal:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Na estrutura curricular definida pelas diretrizes gerais da educação básica (Resolução 4/2010), uma escola de qualidade social:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Pesquisas contemporâneas sinalizam que, no âmbito escolar, a educação para a cidadania, visa fundamentalmente:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
A liberdade de aprender, ensinar, pesquisar e divulgar o pensamento, arte e saber está assegurada na Lei de Diretrizes e Bases da Educação Nacional como princípio.
Assinale a alternativa correta em relação ao tema.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas