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Questões de Concursos Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT

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81Q916711 | Pedagogia, Concepções de Educação Infantil, Monitora de Creche, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

O monitor de creche tem importantes atribuições no exercício de sua função, dentre elas:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

82Q916758 | Educação Física, Modalidades Esportivas, Mato Grossensses, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

Entre as funções psicomotoras, uma se destaca por compreender a consciência das partes do corpo, bem como a percepção do próprio corpo como um todo, seja em movimento ou em repouso. Tal função é denominada de:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

83Q1024280 | Inglês, Ensino da Língua Estrangeira Inglesa, Professor Nível Superior Inglês, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

Texto associado.
TEXT:
Flipped learning – could it work for you?
Exploring the benefits, challenges and tips for success

By Stephanie Hirschman
October 2, 2023


Flipped learning is very much a buzz word these days, and it’s worth thinking about whether this approach is suitable for your
lessons. It’s quite easy to define: whereas a more traditional model of teaching involves some sort of initial input (for example a
lecture or demonstration) followed by some sort of related output (for example a discussion or experiment) with some homework to follow, in flipped learning, this order is disrupted. Students do their homework before the class meets by watching a recorded lecture or video or reading an article. This enables them to spend the lesson time on activities which make a more significant contribution to their deep understanding and mastery of important ideas, for example, discussion, roleplay or presentations. It sits well within blended learning as the pre-lesson homework is likely to be accessed online, while the class activities are conducted face-to-face.

Why is it important?
Flipped learning makes good use of technology, allowing students to approach the input at their own level. Some may need to view a video several times more than would be possible in a group classroom setting, with frequent pauses and rewinding to ensure that they have recognized the main points. It’s also possible for students to explore other aspects of a topic, either using further links that the teacher provides, or finding other relevant resources to explore on their own. Finally, they can do the work when and where they wish, and even make use of otherwise “dead” time, like waiting for a bus.


How relevant is it for English language teaching (ELT)?

It’s important to recognize that flipped learning was not developed with ELT contexts in mind. In a language lesson, we may find
students reading a text about, say, major infrastructure projects, but this content is merely a vehicle for some other language point like expressing high numbers or making comparisons. During a conventional English lesson, the teacher would be guiding students through the text, encouraging prediction and other strategies and setting achievable reading or listening tasks to check basic understanding, before introducing key language points in a staged presentation. This would be followed by controlled practice and freer production. It’s not easy to see how this pattern of brief but meaningful interactive activities maps onto flipped learning. ELT texts, even at advanced levels, tend to be too short to be worth exploring in depth, unlike a 30-minute lecture or video thatstudents of other subjects may be watching. Of course, it could be argued that the true content of the lesson, ie the language point, could be the subject of flipped learning, with students watching a presentation on this subject before the class meets. However, this removes the language point from an engaging and meaningful context and furthermore, working alone robs students of the opportunity to ask questions and discuss emergent ideas about meaning, which are key elements of communicative learning.

Tips for success
Nonetheless, it is possible to flip an ELT classroom, with some adjustments:

1. Flipped learning would suit certain types of ELT which are heavily content based, like CLIL or Business. Mature students are more likely to have the motivation required to implement this approach sensibly.

2. It makes sense to devote the final stages of a lesson to introducing the content that students will explore independently before the next class meeting. This should include a justification of why the content was chosen, how students should approach it and how they can check their understanding. Providing some comprehension questions is a minimum. If answers aren’t furnished, the next class meeting could open with an activity to discuss and check these.

3. The teacher must provide an easy and reliable way for students to access the content, for example via an online learning system.

4. It’s reasonable to expect that students will require training and a settling-in period, as they come to terms with the demands of the new system. It could even be worth trialing the routine during a face-to-face lesson, with students accessing content on their phones or laptops, and with some reminders about how to approach a reading text (for example skimming and scanning) or how to make good use of technology to ensure effective listening (for example, rewinding, user slower speed settings or making use of a tape script).

5. Because of the investment required in learner training, flipped learning will be tricky to implement in programs with continuous enrolment. It’s far more suitable for a setting with a termly or yearly intake date.

6. Even when the system is up and running, there will probably always be a number of students who have not prepared adequately for the lesson. This will affect how successful follow-up activities are and the teacher needs some strategies in place to address this.

Available in: https://linguahouse.com/blog/post/flipped-learning-could-it-work-for-you
Acesso: 17/10/2024
Considerando as concepções metodológicas referentes ao processo de ensino e aprendizagem da língua inglesa, a metodologia utilizada por um professor que solicita aos alunos que memorizem uma lista de verbos no imperativo antes da aula, com o objetivo de realizar uma atividade prática na qual os alunos executem as ações dos verbos estudados, enfatizando a aprendizagem através da prática corporal é:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

84Q916879 | Informática, Windows, Instrutor de Informática, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

Um usuário de um computador com MS Windows 10 em português, utilizando o Mozilla Firefox, precisa fechar uma janela utilizando teclas de atalho. Para esse caso, as teclas de atalho a serem usadas são:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

85Q916710 | Ética na Administração Pública, Monitora de Creche, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

Em todos os setores da vida social há pessoas que são éticas e outras que não são. Joana, em seu ambiente de trabalho, é reconhecida como uma pessoa ética, porque age:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

86Q916718 | Enfermagem, Diabetes Mellitus, Técnica de Enfermagem, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

Um paciente está em tratamento com metformina para diabetes tipo 2 e foi prescrito o uso de um antibiótico da classe dos macrolídeos. Para a segurança do paciente em relação à interação medicamentosa, o técnico de enfermagem deve considerar:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

87Q1024283 | Inglês, Vocabulário Vocabulary, Professor Nível Superior Inglês, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

Texto associado.
TEXT:
Flipped learning – could it work for you?
Exploring the benefits, challenges and tips for success

By Stephanie Hirschman
October 2, 2023


Flipped learning is very much a buzz word these days, and it’s worth thinking about whether this approach is suitable for your
lessons. It’s quite easy to define: whereas a more traditional model of teaching involves some sort of initial input (for example a
lecture or demonstration) followed by some sort of related output (for example a discussion or experiment) with some homework to follow, in flipped learning, this order is disrupted. Students do their homework before the class meets by watching a recorded lecture or video or reading an article. This enables them to spend the lesson time on activities which make a more significant contribution to their deep understanding and mastery of important ideas, for example, discussion, roleplay or presentations. It sits well within blended learning as the pre-lesson homework is likely to be accessed online, while the class activities are conducted face-to-face.

Why is it important?
Flipped learning makes good use of technology, allowing students to approach the input at their own level. Some may need to view a video several times more than would be possible in a group classroom setting, with frequent pauses and rewinding to ensure that they have recognized the main points. It’s also possible for students to explore other aspects of a topic, either using further links that the teacher provides, or finding other relevant resources to explore on their own. Finally, they can do the work when and where they wish, and even make use of otherwise “dead” time, like waiting for a bus.


How relevant is it for English language teaching (ELT)?

It’s important to recognize that flipped learning was not developed with ELT contexts in mind. In a language lesson, we may find
students reading a text about, say, major infrastructure projects, but this content is merely a vehicle for some other language point like expressing high numbers or making comparisons. During a conventional English lesson, the teacher would be guiding students through the text, encouraging prediction and other strategies and setting achievable reading or listening tasks to check basic understanding, before introducing key language points in a staged presentation. This would be followed by controlled practice and freer production. It’s not easy to see how this pattern of brief but meaningful interactive activities maps onto flipped learning. ELT texts, even at advanced levels, tend to be too short to be worth exploring in depth, unlike a 30-minute lecture or video thatstudents of other subjects may be watching. Of course, it could be argued that the true content of the lesson, ie the language point, could be the subject of flipped learning, with students watching a presentation on this subject before the class meets. However, this removes the language point from an engaging and meaningful context and furthermore, working alone robs students of the opportunity to ask questions and discuss emergent ideas about meaning, which are key elements of communicative learning.

Tips for success
Nonetheless, it is possible to flip an ELT classroom, with some adjustments:

1. Flipped learning would suit certain types of ELT which are heavily content based, like CLIL or Business. Mature students are more likely to have the motivation required to implement this approach sensibly.

2. It makes sense to devote the final stages of a lesson to introducing the content that students will explore independently before the next class meeting. This should include a justification of why the content was chosen, how students should approach it and how they can check their understanding. Providing some comprehension questions is a minimum. If answers aren’t furnished, the next class meeting could open with an activity to discuss and check these.

3. The teacher must provide an easy and reliable way for students to access the content, for example via an online learning system.

4. It’s reasonable to expect that students will require training and a settling-in period, as they come to terms with the demands of the new system. It could even be worth trialing the routine during a face-to-face lesson, with students accessing content on their phones or laptops, and with some reminders about how to approach a reading text (for example skimming and scanning) or how to make good use of technology to ensure effective listening (for example, rewinding, user slower speed settings or making use of a tape script).

5. Because of the investment required in learner training, flipped learning will be tricky to implement in programs with continuous enrolment. It’s far more suitable for a setting with a termly or yearly intake date.

6. Even when the system is up and running, there will probably always be a number of students who have not prepared adequately for the lesson. This will affect how successful follow-up activities are and the teacher needs some strategies in place to address this.

Available in: https://linguahouse.com/blog/post/flipped-learning-could-it-work-for-you
Acesso: 17/10/2024
No primeiro parágrafo do texto, a expressão “buzz word” é definida como:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

88Q916944 | Educação Artística, Canto e Coral, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

Pode-se apontar como um método amplamente utilizado no ensino de música para crianças, que enfatiza o ritmo, o movimento corporal e improvisação o:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

90Q1067061 | Administração Pública, Eficiência, Agente Administrativo, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2025

Os princípios fundamentais que regem a Administração Pública Federal, previstos no Art. 37 da Constituição Federal/1988, são regras impostas que o bom administrador público deve observar no dia a dia do seu labor. Assim, o princípio fundamental que estabelece uma relação entre os recursos utilizados e os resultados alcançados, mensurável por meio de indicadores de desempenho, é o princípio da:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

91Q916950 | Música, Acorde, Canto e Coral, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

A cifra do acorde Ebm7 contém as notas:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

92Q1024288 | Inglês, Vocabulário Vocabulary, Professor Nível Superior Inglês, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

Texto associado.
TEXT:
Flipped learning – could it work for you?
Exploring the benefits, challenges and tips for success

By Stephanie Hirschman
October 2, 2023


Flipped learning is very much a buzz word these days, and it’s worth thinking about whether this approach is suitable for your
lessons. It’s quite easy to define: whereas a more traditional model of teaching involves some sort of initial input (for example a
lecture or demonstration) followed by some sort of related output (for example a discussion or experiment) with some homework to follow, in flipped learning, this order is disrupted. Students do their homework before the class meets by watching a recorded lecture or video or reading an article. This enables them to spend the lesson time on activities which make a more significant contribution to their deep understanding and mastery of important ideas, for example, discussion, roleplay or presentations. It sits well within blended learning as the pre-lesson homework is likely to be accessed online, while the class activities are conducted face-to-face.

Why is it important?
Flipped learning makes good use of technology, allowing students to approach the input at their own level. Some may need to view a video several times more than would be possible in a group classroom setting, with frequent pauses and rewinding to ensure that they have recognized the main points. It’s also possible for students to explore other aspects of a topic, either using further links that the teacher provides, or finding other relevant resources to explore on their own. Finally, they can do the work when and where they wish, and even make use of otherwise “dead” time, like waiting for a bus.


How relevant is it for English language teaching (ELT)?

It’s important to recognize that flipped learning was not developed with ELT contexts in mind. In a language lesson, we may find
students reading a text about, say, major infrastructure projects, but this content is merely a vehicle for some other language point like expressing high numbers or making comparisons. During a conventional English lesson, the teacher would be guiding students through the text, encouraging prediction and other strategies and setting achievable reading or listening tasks to check basic understanding, before introducing key language points in a staged presentation. This would be followed by controlled practice and freer production. It’s not easy to see how this pattern of brief but meaningful interactive activities maps onto flipped learning. ELT texts, even at advanced levels, tend to be too short to be worth exploring in depth, unlike a 30-minute lecture or video thatstudents of other subjects may be watching. Of course, it could be argued that the true content of the lesson, ie the language point, could be the subject of flipped learning, with students watching a presentation on this subject before the class meets. However, this removes the language point from an engaging and meaningful context and furthermore, working alone robs students of the opportunity to ask questions and discuss emergent ideas about meaning, which are key elements of communicative learning.

Tips for success
Nonetheless, it is possible to flip an ELT classroom, with some adjustments:

1. Flipped learning would suit certain types of ELT which are heavily content based, like CLIL or Business. Mature students are more likely to have the motivation required to implement this approach sensibly.

2. It makes sense to devote the final stages of a lesson to introducing the content that students will explore independently before the next class meeting. This should include a justification of why the content was chosen, how students should approach it and how they can check their understanding. Providing some comprehension questions is a minimum. If answers aren’t furnished, the next class meeting could open with an activity to discuss and check these.

3. The teacher must provide an easy and reliable way for students to access the content, for example via an online learning system.

4. It’s reasonable to expect that students will require training and a settling-in period, as they come to terms with the demands of the new system. It could even be worth trialing the routine during a face-to-face lesson, with students accessing content on their phones or laptops, and with some reminders about how to approach a reading text (for example skimming and scanning) or how to make good use of technology to ensure effective listening (for example, rewinding, user slower speed settings or making use of a tape script).

5. Because of the investment required in learner training, flipped learning will be tricky to implement in programs with continuous enrolment. It’s far more suitable for a setting with a termly or yearly intake date.

6. Even when the system is up and running, there will probably always be a number of students who have not prepared adequately for the lesson. This will affect how successful follow-up activities are and the teacher needs some strategies in place to address this.

Available in: https://linguahouse.com/blog/post/flipped-learning-could-it-work-for-you
Acesso: 17/10/2024
Analisando o trecho: “Even when the system is up and running, there will probably always be a number of students who have not prepared adequately for the lesson”, a expressão idiomática que pode ser usada para se referir a este tipo de aluno é:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

93Q912247 | Odontologia, Anatomia da Cavidade Pulpar, Auxiliar de Consultório Dentário, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2023

A abertura coronária de um dente consiste no primeiro passo do tratamento endodôntico, buscando luminosidade, visibilidade da câmara pulpar e da entrada dos canais. A forma de conveniência tem por objetivo:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

94Q916943 | Pedagogia, A Didática e o Processo de Ensino e Aprendizagem, Canto e Coral, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

Pode-se considerar com ação fundamental na preparação e organização de uma aula:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

95Q916688 | Música, Acorde, Violão Clássico/Contrabaixo/Guitarra, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

A cifra do acorde Ab7 9b possui as seguintes notas:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

96Q916690 | Conhecimentos Gerais, Violão Clássico/Contrabaixo/Guitarra, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

“O fenômeno conhecido como Rock Nacional popularizou o gênero musical no Brasil na década de 1980, com músicas que abordavam temas mais urbanos, falando da vida cotidiana. Encabeçado por bandas como Titãs e Os Paralamas do Sucesso, o rock brasileiro deste período teve como marca o processo de redemocratização pelo qual o Brasil passava.” (QUADROS JÚNIOR, 2019) Uma outra banda de rock que fez bastante sucesso nesta mesma época é:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

97Q916947 | Educação Artística, Canto e Coral, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

Ao trabalhar com um coral de alunos de música em um repertório que exige grande precisão rítmica e articulação, a estratégia pedagógica mais adequada para desenvolver a independência rítmica e a consciência corporal dos alunos seria:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

98Q916703 | Pedagogia, Aspectos Psicológicos da Educação, Instrutora do Programa Gente Miúda, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2024

Para Henri Wallon, estudioso do desenvolvimento da personalidade, o primeiro ano de vida da criança, é predominantemente:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

99Q912238 | Odontologia, Odontologia PréClínica, Auxiliar de Consultório Dentário, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2023

Os Cimentos de Ionômero de Vidro (CIVs) são muito usados na odontologia. Quando utilizados em selamento de fóssulas e fissuras, em crianças com alto risco à cárie, ocorre a liberação de flúor. Essa característica do CIV é denominada:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

100Q912251 | Odontologia, Código de Ética Odontológica, Auxiliar de Consultório Dentário, Prefeitura de Nova Mutum MT, SELECON, 2023

Constitui infração ética quanto ao relacionamento do profissional (equipe odontológica) com o paciente:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
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