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3924577 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: EDUCA
Orgão: Pref. Brejo Cruz-PB
Provas:
TEXT 2
English Should Not Be Taught Like It’s Physics: Rethinking How We Teach Beginner Level Learners

Introduction
When teaching English to beginner-level learners, one of the biggest mistakes we make is treating the language like a set of scientific formulas to be memorized. In the quintessential classroom of traditional, test-focused educational systems, English is often taught as though it were physics; it’s rigid, theoretical, and abstract. Language, however, is a far cry from the aforementioned descriptions. Language is dynamic, flexible, and has a certain “feel” to it.
The problem with the “Physics” Approach
Picture this: you walk into a physics class and sit down. Immediately, all sorts of theories, equations, and vocabulary you’ve never heard before are being thrown at you without any context. Doesn’t feel good, does it? That’s how many beginner-level English learners feel. This method relies heavily on grammar drills, vocabulary lists, and some pretty unnatural textbook dialogues. Learners may know the structure of the present perfect tense, but they choke when asked, “How was your weekend?” Why? Because they’ve been trained to decode language like a formula; not use it as a tool for expression.
What language really is
Language is instinctive. We don’t learn our first language by studying grammar rules, but rather through interaction, repetition, and real-life use. Babies don’t sit down with textbooks in their lap. They listen, observe, repeat, and gradually experiment; with zero fear of making mistakes. This is how language sticks. For beginner-level learners, especially adults, we need to replicate that natural process as much as possible. The focus should shift from knowledge about the language to using the language. There should also be some emphasis on making sure the process is enjoyable.
Rethinking success
We need to redefine what success looks like in beginner English classes. It’s not about perfect grammar. It’s about confidence, connection, and the ability to navigate simple conversations. It’s about the listener’s ability to understand what is being said by the speaker and vice-versa. I remember when I’d tease my grandma for mispronouncing words (for example, she’d say “brade” instead of “blade”), and her retort would be, “You understood me though, didn’t you?!”
It’s a win if a student can say, “I like sushi. You?” If they can ask, “Where is the toilet?” when they’re pressed, they’ve got more success than someone who has 50 verbs memorized but can’t use them.
Conclusion
English is NOT physics. It’s not about solving problems on paper; it’s about expressing thoughts and being understood, building relationships and making life easier in an everchanging global world. If we want our students to thrive, as well as keep being interested in improving and using English long after moving on from our lessons together, we need to stop treating the language like a set of scientific formulas and start treating it like what it truly is: a human skill.
Let’s make the classroom a space of interaction and communication, not calculation.
Content extracted and adapted from: https://www.hltmag.co.uk/oct25/english-should-not-be-taught-like-it-sphysics
Supported by Text 2, choose the alternative that correctly reflects characteristic(s) of the teaching approach criticized by the author:
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3924576 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: EDUCA
Orgão: Pref. Brejo Cruz-PB
Provas:
TEXT 2
English Should Not Be Taught Like It’s Physics: Rethinking How We Teach Beginner Level Learners

Introduction
When teaching English to beginner-level learners, one of the biggest mistakes we make is treating the language like a set of scientific formulas to be memorized. In the quintessential classroom of traditional, test-focused educational systems, English is often taught as though it were physics; it’s rigid, theoretical, and abstract. Language, however, is a far cry from the aforementioned descriptions. Language is dynamic, flexible, and has a certain “feel” to it.
The problem with the “Physics” Approach
Picture this: you walk into a physics class and sit down. Immediately, all sorts of theories, equations, and vocabulary you’ve never heard before are being thrown at you without any context. Doesn’t feel good, does it? That’s how many beginner-level English learners feel. This method relies heavily on grammar drills, vocabulary lists, and some pretty unnatural textbook dialogues. Learners may know the structure of the present perfect tense, but they choke when asked, “How was your weekend?” Why? Because they’ve been trained to decode language like a formula; not use it as a tool for expression.
What language really is
Language is instinctive. We don’t learn our first language by studying grammar rules, but rather through interaction, repetition, and real-life use. Babies don’t sit down with textbooks in their lap. They listen, observe, repeat, and gradually experiment; with zero fear of making mistakes. This is how language sticks. For beginner-level learners, especially adults, we need to replicate that natural process as much as possible. The focus should shift from knowledge about the language to using the language. There should also be some emphasis on making sure the process is enjoyable.
Rethinking success
We need to redefine what success looks like in beginner English classes. It’s not about perfect grammar. It’s about confidence, connection, and the ability to navigate simple conversations. It’s about the listener’s ability to understand what is being said by the speaker and vice-versa. I remember when I’d tease my grandma for mispronouncing words (for example, she’d say “brade” instead of “blade”), and her retort would be, “You understood me though, didn’t you?!”
It’s a win if a student can say, “I like sushi. You?” If they can ask, “Where is the toilet?” when they’re pressed, they’ve got more success than someone who has 50 verbs memorized but can’t use them.
Conclusion
English is NOT physics. It’s not about solving problems on paper; it’s about expressing thoughts and being understood, building relationships and making life easier in an everchanging global world. If we want our students to thrive, as well as keep being interested in improving and using English long after moving on from our lessons together, we need to stop treating the language like a set of scientific formulas and start treating it like what it truly is: a human skill.
Let’s make the classroom a space of interaction and communication, not calculation.
Content extracted and adapted from: https://www.hltmag.co.uk/oct25/english-should-not-be-taught-like-it-sphysics
According to Text 2, the author believes that success, for beginner learners of English language, should be measured by:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3924575 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: EDUCA
Orgão: Pref. Brejo Cruz-PB
Provas:
TEXT 2
English Should Not Be Taught Like It’s Physics: Rethinking How We Teach Beginner Level Learners

Introduction
When teaching English to beginner-level learners, one of the biggest mistakes we make is treating the language like a set of scientific formulas to be memorized. In the quintessential classroom of traditional, test-focused educational systems, English is often taught as though it were physics; it’s rigid, theoretical, and abstract. Language, however, is a far cry from the aforementioned descriptions. Language is dynamic, flexible, and has a certain “feel” to it.
The problem with the “Physics” Approach
Picture this: you walk into a physics class and sit down. Immediately, all sorts of theories, equations, and vocabulary you’ve never heard before are being thrown at you without any context. Doesn’t feel good, does it? That’s how many beginner-level English learners feel. This method relies heavily on grammar drills, vocabulary lists, and some pretty unnatural textbook dialogues. Learners may know the structure of the present perfect tense, but they choke when asked, “How was your weekend?” Why? Because they’ve been trained to decode language like a formula; not use it as a tool for expression.
What language really is
Language is instinctive. We don’t learn our first language by studying grammar rules, but rather through interaction, repetition, and real-life use. Babies don’t sit down with textbooks in their lap. They listen, observe, repeat, and gradually experiment; with zero fear of making mistakes. This is how language sticks. For beginner-level learners, especially adults, we need to replicate that natural process as much as possible. The focus should shift from knowledge about the language to using the language. There should also be some emphasis on making sure the process is enjoyable.
Rethinking success
We need to redefine what success looks like in beginner English classes. It’s not about perfect grammar. It’s about confidence, connection, and the ability to navigate simple conversations. It’s about the listener’s ability to understand what is being said by the speaker and vice-versa. I remember when I’d tease my grandma for mispronouncing words (for example, she’d say “brade” instead of “blade”), and her retort would be, “You understood me though, didn’t you?!”
It’s a win if a student can say, “I like sushi. You?” If they can ask, “Where is the toilet?” when they’re pressed, they’ve got more success than someone who has 50 verbs memorized but can’t use them.
Conclusion
English is NOT physics. It’s not about solving problems on paper; it’s about expressing thoughts and being understood, building relationships and making life easier in an everchanging global world. If we want our students to thrive, as well as keep being interested in improving and using English long after moving on from our lessons together, we need to stop treating the language like a set of scientific formulas and start treating it like what it truly is: a human skill.
Let’s make the classroom a space of interaction and communication, not calculation.
Content extracted and adapted from: https://www.hltmag.co.uk/oct25/english-should-not-be-taught-like-it-sphysics
Based on Text 2, related to its general idea, the English language classroom should focus primarily on:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3924574 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: EDUCA
Orgão: Pref. Brejo Cruz-PB
Provas:
Enunciado 4878216-1
The Design Thinking Classroom: Using Design Thinking to Reimagine the Role and Practice of Educators (English Edition)
By David Jakes (Author) | ☆☆☆☆☆
A Design-Oriented Approach That Can Best Serve Today's Students and Educators Alike
How can we make schools more relevant, engaging, and capable of supporting the development of skills and dispositions that will help students themselves design a life worth living?
Drawing from his ample experience in the classroom, as a school administrator, and as a designer, author David Jakes makes the case that design thinking offers an approach to education that is responsive, collaborative, and well-suited to the opportunities of the twenty-first century. Full of exercises and suggestions for how design thinking can change educators’ approach to classroom layout, virtual learning, assessment, and more, this book shows how we can make today's classrooms better places to teach and learn.
The Design Thinking Classroom helps create the conditions for K–12 teachers and school leaders to innovate and improve a new kind of educational experience. It’s a book for readers who are invested in rising to the challenges faced by modern institutions and a powerful argument for the ways design thinking can transform education.
Excerpt extracted and adapted from: https://www.amazon.com.br/Design-Thinking-Classroom-ReimagineEducators-ebook/dp/B0BR8MPY76?ref_=ast_author_mpb
Which of the following sentences is the only one correctly expressed in passive voice?
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3924573 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: EDUCA
Orgão: Pref. Brejo Cruz-PB
Provas:
Enunciado 4878215-1
The Design Thinking Classroom: Using Design Thinking to Reimagine the Role and Practice of Educators (English Edition)
By David Jakes (Author) | ☆☆☆☆☆
A Design-Oriented Approach That Can Best Serve Today's Students and Educators Alike
How can we make schools more relevant, engaging, and capable of supporting the development of skills and dispositions that will help students themselves design a life worth living?
Drawing from his ample experience in the classroom, as a school administrator, and as a designer, author David Jakes makes the case that design thinking offers an approach to education that is responsive, collaborative, and well-suited to the opportunities of the twenty-first century. Full of exercises and suggestions for how design thinking can change educators’ approach to classroom layout, virtual learning, assessment, and more, this book shows how we can make today's classrooms better places to teach and learn.
The Design Thinking Classroom helps create the conditions for K–12 teachers and school leaders to innovate and improve a new kind of educational experience. It’s a book for readers who are invested in rising to the challenges faced by modern institutions and a powerful argument for the ways design thinking can transform education.
Excerpt extracted and adapted from: https://www.amazon.com.br/Design-Thinking-Classroom-ReimagineEducators-ebook/dp/B0BR8MPY76?ref_=ast_author_mpb
In Text 1, it is said that “This book shows how we can make today's classrooms better places to teach and learn”. Based on this excerpt, choose the alternative that  correctly rewrite this sentence from Present Simple to Present Perfect tense:
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3924572 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: EDUCA
Orgão: Pref. Brejo Cruz-PB
Provas:
Enunciado 4878214-1
The Design Thinking Classroom: Using Design Thinking to Reimagine the Role and Practice of Educators (English Edition)
By David Jakes (Author) | ☆☆☆☆☆
A Design-Oriented Approach That Can Best Serve Today's Students and Educators Alike
How can we make schools more relevant, engaging, and capable of supporting the development of skills and dispositions that will help students themselves design a life worth living?
Drawing from his ample experience in the classroom, as a school administrator, and as a designer, author David Jakes makes the case that design thinking offers an approach to education that is responsive, collaborative, and well-suited to the opportunities of the twenty-first century. Full of exercises and suggestions for how design thinking can change educators’ approach to classroom layout, virtual learning, assessment, and more, this book shows how we can make today's classrooms better places to teach and learn.
The Design Thinking Classroom helps create the conditions for K–12 teachers and school leaders to innovate and improve a new kind of educational experience. It’s a book for readers who are invested in rising to the challenges faced by modern institutions and a powerful argument for the ways design thinking can transform education.
Excerpt extracted and adapted from: https://www.amazon.com.br/Design-Thinking-Classroom-ReimagineEducators-ebook/dp/B0BR8MPY76?ref_=ast_author_mpb
The expression “a life worth living” (extracted from Text 1) suggests:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3924571 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: EDUCA
Orgão: Pref. Brejo Cruz-PB
Provas:
Enunciado 4878213-1
The Design Thinking Classroom: Using Design Thinking to Reimagine the Role and Practice of Educators (English Edition)
By David Jakes (Author) | ☆☆☆☆☆
A Design-Oriented Approach That Can Best Serve Today's Students and Educators Alike
How can we make schools more relevant, engaging, and capable of supporting the development of skills and dispositions that will help students themselves design a life worth living?
Drawing from his ample experience in the classroom, as a school administrator, and as a designer, author David Jakes makes the case that design thinking offers an approach to education that is responsive, collaborative, and well-suited to the opportunities of the twenty-first century. Full of exercises and suggestions for how design thinking can change educators’ approach to classroom layout, virtual learning, assessment, and more, this book shows how we can make today's classrooms better places to teach and learn.
The Design Thinking Classroom helps create the conditions for K–12 teachers and school leaders to innovate and improve a new kind of educational experience. It’s a book for readers who are invested in rising to the challenges faced by modern institutions and a powerful argument for the ways design thinking can transform education.
Excerpt extracted and adapted from: https://www.amazon.com.br/Design-Thinking-Classroom-ReimagineEducators-ebook/dp/B0BR8MPY76?ref_=ast_author_mpb
Considering the following excerpt extracted from Text 1, where it says “A Design-Oriented Approach That Can Best Serve Today's Students and Educators Alike”, the underlined word (“Alike”) can be correctly replaced (preserving its original meaning and use in its original context) by:
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3924570 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: EDUCA
Orgão: Pref. Brejo Cruz-PB
Provas:
Enunciado 4878212-1
The Design Thinking Classroom: Using Design Thinking to Reimagine the Role and Practice of Educators (English Edition)
By David Jakes (Author) | ☆☆☆☆☆
A Design-Oriented Approach That Can Best Serve Today's Students and Educators Alike
How can we make schools more relevant, engaging, and capable of supporting the development of skills and dispositions that will help students themselves design a life worth living?
Drawing from his ample experience in the classroom, as a school administrator, and as a designer, author David Jakes makes the case that design thinking offers an approach to education that is responsive, collaborative, and well-suited to the opportunities of the twenty-first century. Full of exercises and suggestions for how design thinking can change educators’ approach to classroom layout, virtual learning, assessment, and more, this book shows how we can make today's classrooms better places to teach and learn.
The Design Thinking Classroom helps create the conditions for K–12 teachers and school leaders to innovate and improve a new kind of educational experience. It’s a book for readers who are invested in rising to the challenges faced by modern institutions and a powerful argument for the ways design thinking can transform education.
Excerpt extracted and adapted from: https://www.amazon.com.br/Design-Thinking-Classroom-ReimagineEducators-ebook/dp/B0BR8MPY76?ref_=ast_author_mpb
Based on Text 1, choose the only one option that correctly presents Daniel Jakes’ opinion about Design Thinking:
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3924569 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: EDUCA
Orgão: Pref. Brejo Cruz-PB
Provas:
Enunciado 4878211-1
The Design Thinking Classroom: Using Design Thinking to Reimagine the Role and Practice of Educators (English Edition)
By David Jakes (Author) | ☆☆☆☆☆
A Design-Oriented Approach That Can Best Serve Today's Students and Educators Alike
How can we make schools more relevant, engaging, and capable of supporting the development of skills and dispositions that will help students themselves design a life worth living?
Drawing from his ample experience in the classroom, as a school administrator, and as a designer, author David Jakes makes the case that design thinking offers an approach to education that is responsive, collaborative, and well-suited to the opportunities of the twenty-first century. Full of exercises and suggestions for how design thinking can change educators’ approach to classroom layout, virtual learning, assessment, and more, this book shows how we can make today's classrooms better places to teach and learn.
The Design Thinking Classroom helps create the conditions for K–12 teachers and school leaders to innovate and improve a new kind of educational experience. It’s a book for readers who are invested in rising to the challenges faced by modern institutions and a powerful argument for the ways design thinking can transform education.
Excerpt extracted and adapted from: https://www.amazon.com.br/Design-Thinking-Classroom-ReimagineEducators-ebook/dp/B0BR8MPY76?ref_=ast_author_mpb
Choose the only one alternative that correctly presents one of the central questions raised in the Text 1:
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3924568 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: EDUCA
Orgão: Pref. Brejo Cruz-PB
Provas:
Enunciado 4878210-1
The Design Thinking Classroom: Using Design Thinking to Reimagine the Role and Practice of Educators (English Edition)
By David Jakes (Author) | ☆☆☆☆☆
A Design-Oriented Approach That Can Best Serve Today's Students and Educators Alike
How can we make schools more relevant, engaging, and capable of supporting the development of skills and dispositions that will help students themselves design a life worth living?
Drawing from his ample experience in the classroom, as a school administrator, and as a designer, author David Jakes makes the case that design thinking offers an approach to education that is responsive, collaborative, and well-suited to the opportunities of the twenty-first century. Full of exercises and suggestions for how design thinking can change educators’ approach to classroom layout, virtual learning, assessment, and more, this book shows how we can make today's classrooms better places to teach and learn.
The Design Thinking Classroom helps create the conditions for K–12 teachers and school leaders to innovate and improve a new kind of educational experience. It’s a book for readers who are invested in rising to the challenges faced by modern institutions and a powerful argument for the ways design thinking can transform education.
Excerpt extracted and adapted from: https://www.amazon.com.br/Design-Thinking-Classroom-ReimagineEducators-ebook/dp/B0BR8MPY76?ref_=ast_author_mpb
Analyzing Text 1, considering the characteristics of its textual genre as well as its sociocommunicative function, choose the only one alternative that correctly describes its main objective:
 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas