Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 50 questões.

2566577 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: IBADE
Orgão: SEE-AC
Provas:

Choose the only word that CAN´T replace PAL in this sentence “ Mouse, cat, man... we´re all in the same boat, pal.”

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2307322 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: IBADE
Orgão: SEE-AC
Provas:

The word SHE in “ That's the look she gave me” refers to:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2307288 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: IBADE
Orgão: SEE-AC

TEXT 1

REFERS TO QUESTION FROM

Lessons for Americans, From a Chines Classroom

Observing how Chinese 2- and 3-year-olds navigated a second language, I wondered whether I could have done this for my children.

SHANGHAI — We sat in toddler-size wooden chairs around an orderly circle of Chinese 2-year-olds, busy with circle time. As a parent of three children who collectively spent 15 years in American day care, I am very familiar with circle time.

But I was in this Shanghai classroom as a professor, with college students from many different countries in a class I’m teaching here on children and childhood.

We were observing in a private kindergarten, designed to provide young children — starting at age 2 — with a carefully structured, fully bilingual curriculum, especially important because English language skills are vital for educational success in China.

Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children and the ways that they learn, while also thinking about Chinese society today. They get windows onto certain slices of this complex country: a high-end private bilingual program that starts with toddlers; a city high school for academically gifted students; a middle school created for the children of the rural migrants who have come by the millions from China’s poorer provinces to work in Shanghai, but whose rights to social benefits are severely limited in the city.

These visits offer the college students insights into many of the social issues facing China, and we spend time in class discussing questions like the huge role that the annual gaokao college entrance exam plays in determining a child’s educational destiny (English is one of the required subjects), the pressures on families that create a culture of cram schools, and the controversies over reserving spots in colleges for kids from rural areas.

But all of those questions have powerful resonances when you think about the issues of childhood education and child development, which have to be addressed in every country. As my college students discuss the different facets of childhood around the world, visiting the Chinese schools also helps them in remembering and thinking about what children look like at different ages, and how they play and interact and learn.

Available in : https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/, accessed on February 26th, 2020. Adapted

The suffix of the word POORER in has the same meanig as in:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2307287 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: IBADE
Orgão: SEE-AC

TEXT 1

REFERS TO QUESTION FROM

Lessons for Americans, From a Chines Classroom

Observing how Chinese 2- and 3-year-olds navigated a second language, I wondered whether I could have done this for my children.

SHANGHAI — We sat in toddler-size wooden chairs around an orderly circle of Chinese 2-year-olds, busy with circle time. As a parent of three children who collectively spent 15 years in American day care, I am very familiar with circle time.

But I was in this Shanghai classroom as a professor, with college students from many different countries in a class I’m teaching here on children and childhood.

We were observing in a private kindergarten, designed to provide young children — starting at age 2 — with a carefully structured, fully bilingual curriculum, especially important because English language skills are vital for educational success in China.

Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children and the ways that they learn, while also thinking about Chinese society today. They get windows onto certain slices of this complex country: a high-end private bilingual program that starts with toddlers; a city high school for academically gifted students; a middle school created for the children of the rural migrants who have come by the millions from China’s poorer provinces to work in Shanghai, but whose rights to social benefits are severely limited in the city.

These visits offer the college students insights into many of the social issues facing China, and we spend time in class discussing questions like the huge role that the annual gaokao college entrance exam plays in determining a child’s educational destiny (English is one of the required subjects), the pressures on families that create a culture of cram schools, and the controversies over reserving spots in colleges for kids from rural areas.

But all of those questions have powerful resonances when you think about the issues of childhood education and child development, which have to be addressed in every country. As my college students discuss the different facets of childhood around the world, visiting the Chinese schools also helps them in remembering and thinking about what children look like at different ages, and how they play and interact and learn.

Available in : https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/, accessed on February 26th, 2020. Adapted

Todas as palavras a seguir são cognatas, EXCETO:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2307286 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: IBADE
Orgão: SEE-AC

TEXT 1

REFERS TO QUESTION FROM

Lessons for Americans, From a Chines Classroom

Observing how Chinese 2- and 3-year-olds navigated a second language, I wondered whether I could have done this for my children.

SHANGHAI — We sat in toddler-size wooden chairs around an orderly circle of Chinese 2-year-olds, busy with circle time. As a parent of three children who collectively spent 15 years in American day care, I am very familiar with circle time.

But I was in this Shanghai classroom as a professor, with college students from many different countries in a class I’m teaching here on children and childhood.

We were observing in a private kindergarten, designed to provide young children — starting at age 2 — with a carefully structured, fully bilingual curriculum, especially important because English language skills are vital for educational success in China.

Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children and the ways that they learn, while also thinking about Chinese society today. They get windows onto certain slices of this complex country: a high-end private bilingual program that starts with toddlers; a city high school for academically gifted students; a middle school created for the children of the rural migrants who have come by the millions from China’s poorer provinces to work in Shanghai, but whose rights to social benefits are severely limited in the city.

These visits offer the college students insights into many of the social issues facing China, and we spend time in class discussing questions like the huge role that the annual gaokao college entrance exam plays in determining a child’s educational destiny (English is one of the required subjects), the pressures on families that create a culture of cram schools, and the controversies over reserving spots in colleges for kids from rural areas.

But all of those questions have powerful resonances when you think about the issues of childhood education and child development, which have to be addressed in every country. As my college students discuss the different facets of childhood around the world, visiting the Chinese schools also helps them in remembering and thinking about what children look like at different ages, and how they play and interact and learn.

Available in : https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/20/, accessed on February 26th, 2020. Adapted

A synonym for the word HUGE in “the huge role” is:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

É um método que estimula a alfabetização dos adultos mediante a discussão de suas experiências de vida entre si, através de palavras ‘geradoras’. Foi aplicado em 1963, há mais de 50 anos. Foi testado pela primeira vez na cidade de Angicos, Rio Grande do Norte. As informações e características acima são de qual método?

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

Conforme determina o Art. 4º da Lei de Diretrizes e Bases da Educação Nacional, o dever do Estado com educação escolar pública será efetivado mediante a garantia de:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

Paulo Freire, na obra Pedagogia do Oprimido, enfocou seu trabalho tratando a educação como um momento do processo de humanização. Para ele, a construção de uma nova sociedade não poderá ser conduzida pelas elites dominantes, incapazes de oferecer as bases de uma política de reformas. Então, segundo Freire, a construção de uma nova sociedade só poderá ser conduzida pela/pelas/pelos:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

Segundo a LDB, Lei 9394, no Art. 28. na oferta de educação básica para a população rural, os sistemas de ensino promoverão as adaptações necessárias à sua adequação às peculiaridades da vida rural e de cada região, especialmente:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

O livro Pedagogia do Oprimido, de Paulo Freire, foi escrito em 1968, período em que o autor estava exilado no Chile. Foi proibido no Brasil e teve sua publicação liberada em qual década?

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas