Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 40 questões.

3819058 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Pedagogia
Banca: ADM&TEC
Orgão: Pref. Timbaúba-PE
Provas:
O Plano Nacional de Educação (PNE) determina diretrizes, metas e estratégias para a política educacional no período de 2014 a 2024. Uma meta que consta no PNE é:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3819057 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Pedagogia
Banca: ADM&TEC
Orgão: Pref. Timbaúba-PE
Provas:
Leia as afirmativas abaixo acerca da Base Nacional Comum Curricular e, em conformidade com as disposições da Lei n 9.394 de 20 de dezembro de 1996, assinale V para a(s) afirmativa(s) verdadeira(s) e F para a(s) falsa(s).

( ) A carga horária destinada ao cumprimento da Base Nacional Comum Curricular não poderá ser superior a mil e oitocentas horas do total da carga horária do ensino médio, de acordo com a definição dos sistemas de ensino.
( ) A Base Nacional Comum Curricular referente ao ensino médio incluirá facultativamente estudos e práticas de educação física, arte, sociologia e filosofia.
( ) Os currículos do ensino médio incluirão, obrigatoriamente, o estudo da língua inglesa e poderão ofertar outras línguas estrangeiras, em caráter optativo, preferencialmente o espanhol, de acordo com a disponibilidade de oferta, locais e horários definidos pelos sistemas de ensino.

As afirmativas são, na ordem apresentada, respectivamente:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3819056 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Pedagogia
Banca: ADM&TEC
Orgão: Pref. Timbaúba-PE
Provas:
De acordo com o Art. 57 da Lei n 9.394 de 20 de dezembro de 1996, nas instituições públicas de educação superior, o professor ficará obrigado ao mínimo de quantas horas semanais de aulas?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3819055 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Pedagogia
Banca: ADM&TEC
Orgão: Pref. Timbaúba-PE
Provas:
Assinale a alternativa correta a respeito da educação à distância, com base na Lei n 9.394 de 20 de dezembro de 1996.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3819054 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Direito da Criança e do Adolescente
Banca: ADM&TEC
Orgão: Pref. Timbaúba-PE
Provas:
De acordo com o Art. 54 da Lei n 8.069 de 13 de julho de 1990, é dever do Estado assegurar à criança e ao adolescente:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3819053 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Direito da Criança e do Adolescente
Banca: ADM&TEC
Orgão: Pref. Timbaúba-PE
Provas:
A Lei n 8.069 de 13 de julho de 1990 dispõe sobre o Estatuto da Criança e do Adolescente. Com base nos termos dessa lei, assinale a alternativa correta.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3819052 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: ADM&TEC
Orgão: Pref. Timbaúba-PE
Provas:

Read Text I and answer question.

Is social media harming teens? A dive into the research cites risks but returns few hard answers

A new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine grapples with the questions: Is social media harming teenagers? And what can Congress, the Education Department and parents do about it?

The answers are murky. The authors surveyed hundreds of studies across more than a decade and came to complicated, occasionally contradictory, conclusions. On one hand, they found there isn’t enough population data to specifically blame social media for changes in adolescent health. On the other hand, as shown in study after study cited by the report, social media has the clear potential to hurt the health of teenagers, and in situations where a teenager is already experiencing difficulties like a mental health crisis, social media tends to make it worse.

“There is much we still don’t know, but our report lays out a clear path forward for both pursuing the biggest unanswered questions about youth health and social media, and taking steps that can minimize the risk to young people using social media now,” Sandro Galea, dean of the Boston University School of Public Health and chair of the committee behind the report, said in a news release.

According to the report, the ways social media is used seem to make a difference. When a teenager passively scrolls, as opposed to actively posting, that’s connected by many studies to low life satisfaction and feelings of sadness. It may be that showcasing a hobby or an interest on social media doesn’t produce the same harms. But those rates differ by demographic group: Black, non-Hispanic participants in one study reported more negative moods during active social media use, suggesting that the potential benefits of posting on social media are not the same for teenagers of all backgrounds.

In addition, age affects how well certain strategies work. In younger children, a family policy that restricts social media except when it’s actively guided by a parent seems to reduce the risk of problematic use and inappropriate behavior online. But in adolescents, overly restrictive and controlling parental rules, like confiscating a phone for punishment, are often associated with that teenager taking more risks online.

Faced with an urgent need to “create a more transparent industry and a better-informed consumer of social media,” the report calls on companies and regulators to establish international standards, such as clear ways for companies to share data with researchers and accepted best practices to avoid proven harms where possible. It recommends that the International Organization for Standardization – a body that sets global rules in areas such as manufacturing and food safety – be tasked with creating a new system, one that could be used by federal and international agencies to track and evaluate social media companies and the algorithms they build. And it asks for funding from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and other agencies to pay for the sort of large, long-term studies that have in the past identified major public health crises.

Adapted from: https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/socialmedia/social-media-harming-teens-dive-research-citesrisks-returns-hard-answ-rcna129490

Which of the words below is an antonym of “murky”?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3819051 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: ADM&TEC
Orgão: Pref. Timbaúba-PE
Provas:

Read Text I and answer question.

Is social media harming teens? A dive into the research cites risks but returns few hard answers

A new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine grapples with the questions: Is social media harming teenagers? And what can Congress, the Education Department and parents do about it?

The answers are murky. The authors surveyed hundreds of studies across more than a decade and came to complicated, occasionally contradictory, conclusions. On one hand, they found there isn’t enough population data to specifically blame social media for changes in adolescent health. On the other hand, as shown in study after study cited by the report, social media has the clear potential to hurt the health of teenagers, and in situations where a teenager is already experiencing difficulties like a mental health crisis, social media tends to make it worse.

“There is much we still don’t know, but our report lays out a clear path forward for both pursuing the biggest unanswered questions about youth health and social media, and taking steps that can minimize the risk to young people using social media now,” Sandro Galea, dean of the Boston University School of Public Health and chair of the committee behind the report, said in a news release.

According to the report, the ways social media is used seem to make a difference. When a teenager passively scrolls, as opposed to actively posting, that’s connected by many studies to low life satisfaction and feelings of sadness. It may be that showcasing a hobby or an interest on social media doesn’t produce the same harms. But those rates differ by demographic group: Black, non-Hispanic participants in one study reported more negative moods during active social media use, suggesting that the potential benefits of posting on social media are not the same for teenagers of all backgrounds.

In addition, age affects how well certain strategies work. In younger children, a family policy that restricts social media except when it’s actively guided by a parent seems to reduce the risk of problematic use and inappropriate behavior online. But in adolescents, overly restrictive and controlling parental rules, like confiscating a phone for punishment, are often associated with that teenager taking more risks online.

Faced with an urgent need to “create a more transparent industry and a better-informed consumer of social media,” the report calls on companies and regulators to establish international standards, such as clear ways for companies to share data with researchers and accepted best practices to avoid proven harms where possible. It recommends that the International Organization for Standardization – a body that sets global rules in areas such as manufacturing and food safety – be tasked with creating a new system, one that could be used by federal and international agencies to track and evaluate social media companies and the algorithms they build. And it asks for funding from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and other agencies to pay for the sort of large, long-term studies that have in the past identified major public health crises.

Adapted from: https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/socialmedia/social-media-harming-teens-dive-research-citesrisks-returns-hard-answ-rcna129490

Choose the correct alternative in which all four words have a suffix.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3819050 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: ADM&TEC
Orgão: Pref. Timbaúba-PE
Provas:

Read Text I and answer question.

Is social media harming teens? A dive into the research cites risks but returns few hard answers

A new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine grapples with the questions: Is social media harming teenagers? And what can Congress, the Education Department and parents do about it?

The answers are murky. The authors surveyed hundreds of studies across more than a decade and came to complicated, occasionally contradictory, conclusions. On one hand, they found there isn’t enough population data to specifically blame social media for changes in adolescent health. On the other hand, as shown in study after study cited by the report, social media has the clear potential to hurt the health of teenagers, and in situations where a teenager is already experiencing difficulties like a mental health crisis, social media tends to make it worse.

“There is much we still don’t know, but our report lays out a clear path forward for both pursuing the biggest unanswered questions about youth health and social media, and taking steps that can minimize the risk to young people using social media now,” Sandro Galea, dean of the Boston University School of Public Health and chair of the committee behind the report, said in a news release.

According to the report, the ways social media is used seem to make a difference. When a teenager passively scrolls, as opposed to actively posting, that’s connected by many studies to low life satisfaction and feelings of sadness. It may be that showcasing a hobby or an interest on social media doesn’t produce the same harms. But those rates differ by demographic group: Black, non-Hispanic participants in one study reported more negative moods during active social media use, suggesting that the potential benefits of posting on social media are not the same for teenagers of all backgrounds.

In addition, age affects how well certain strategies work. In younger children, a family policy that restricts social media except when it’s actively guided by a parent seems to reduce the risk of problematic use and inappropriate behavior online. But in adolescents, overly restrictive and controlling parental rules, like confiscating a phone for punishment, are often associated with that teenager taking more risks online.

Faced with an urgent need to “create a more transparent industry and a better-informed consumer of social media,” the report calls on companies and regulators to establish international standards, such as clear ways for companies to share data with researchers and accepted best practices to avoid proven harms where possible. It recommends that the International Organization for Standardization – a body that sets global rules in areas such as manufacturing and food safety – be tasked with creating a new system, one that could be used by federal and international agencies to track and evaluate social media companies and the algorithms they build. And it asks for funding from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and other agencies to pay for the sort of large, long-term studies that have in the past identified major public health crises.

Adapted from: https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/socialmedia/social-media-harming-teens-dive-research-citesrisks-returns-hard-answ-rcna129490

The prefix “un”, in the word “unanswered”, is a:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3819049 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: ADM&TEC
Orgão: Pref. Timbaúba-PE
Provas:

Read Text I and answer question.

Is social media harming teens? A dive into the research cites risks but returns few hard answers

A new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine grapples with the questions: Is social media harming teenagers? And what can Congress, the Education Department and parents do about it?

The answers are murky. The authors surveyed hundreds of studies across more than a decade and came to complicated, occasionally contradictory, conclusions. On one hand, they found there isn’t enough population data to specifically blame social media for changes in adolescent health. On the other hand, as shown in study after study cited by the report, social media has the clear potential to hurt the health of teenagers, and in situations where a teenager is already experiencing difficulties like a mental health crisis, social media tends to make it worse.

“There is much we still don’t know, but our report lays out a clear path forward for both pursuing the biggest unanswered questions about youth health and social media, and taking steps that can minimize the risk to young people using social media now,” Sandro Galea, dean of the Boston University School of Public Health and chair of the committee behind the report, said in a news release.

According to the report, the ways social media is used seem to make a difference. When a teenager passively scrolls, as opposed to actively posting, that’s connected by many studies to low life satisfaction and feelings of sadness. It may be that showcasing a hobby or an interest on social media doesn’t produce the same harms. But those rates differ by demographic group: Black, non-Hispanic participants in one study reported more negative moods during active social media use, suggesting that the potential benefits of posting on social media are not the same for teenagers of all backgrounds.

In addition, age affects how well certain strategies work. In younger children, a family policy that restricts social media except when it’s actively guided by a parent seems to reduce the risk of problematic use and inappropriate behavior online. But in adolescents, overly restrictive and controlling parental rules, like confiscating a phone for punishment, are often associated with that teenager taking more risks online.

Faced with an urgent need to “create a more transparent industry and a better-informed consumer of social media,” the report calls on companies and regulators to establish international standards, such as clear ways for companies to share data with researchers and accepted best practices to avoid proven harms where possible. It recommends that the International Organization for Standardization – a body that sets global rules in areas such as manufacturing and food safety – be tasked with creating a new system, one that could be used by federal and international agencies to track and evaluate social media companies and the algorithms they build. And it asks for funding from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and other agencies to pay for the sort of large, long-term studies that have in the past identified major public health crises.

Adapted from: https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/socialmedia/social-media-harming-teens-dive-research-citesrisks-returns-hard-answ-rcna129490

In the sentence “But those rates differ by demographic group (…)”, the word “differ” is a/an:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas