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1Q1081171 | Estatuto da Pessoa com Deficiência, Disposições Preliminares, Especialista em Educação I e Especialista em Educação II, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

A Lei Brasileira de Inclusão da Pessoa com Deficiência, também denominada Estatuto da Pessoa com Deficiência, no seu artigo 3º, define alguns termos que devem ser aplicados na compreensão e aplicação dessa Lei.

A definição “concepção de produtos, ambientes, programas e serviços a serem usados por todas as pessoas, sem necessidade de adaptação ou de projeto específico, incluindo os recursos de tecnologia assistiva”, refere-se a

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2Q1078641 | Noções de Informática, Editor de Apresentações, Nível Médio, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

Um funcionário está preparando uma apresentação de um projeto para o seu chefe usando o Microsoft PowerPoint 2016.

Qual das práticas a seguir é uma maneira eficaz de organizar o conteúdo dessa apresentação?

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3Q1078642 | Noções de Informática, Correio Eletrônico Cliente de e Mail e Webmail, Nível Médio, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

Quando se envia um e-mail, qual parte do endereço de e-mail indica o destinatário específico para quem a mensagem está sendo enviada?

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4Q1078643 | Noções de Informática, Segurança da Informação, Nível Médio, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

Qual é a principal característica de um vírus de computador?

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5Q1078644 | Noções de Informática, Planilhas Eletrônicas, Procurador Municipal Advogado, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

Ao preencher uma planilha, um funcionário precisa verificar se o conteúdo da célula está preenchido com um número ou não. Ele necessita de uma fórmula no Excel para Office 365 que valide essa situação.

A fórmula que o funcionário deve utilizar é:
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6Q1078960 | Noções de Informática, Sistema Operacional, Agente Técnico Administrativo Técnico em Contabilidade, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

Ao realizar operações de manipulação de pastas e arquivos no Windows 10, é essencial compreender as funcionalidades disponíveis para uma organização eficiente do conteúdo.

Nesse contexto, analise as afirmativas a seguir.

I. Utilizando a opção “Compactar”, no Windows 10, é possível reduzir o tamanho de um arquivo, economizando espaço de armazenamento, especialmente útil ao lidar com grandes conjuntos de dados.

II. A funcionalidade “Mover para”, no Windows 10, permite transferir um arquivo ou pasta para outra localização, mantendo uma cópia no local original.

III. A criação de atalhos (shortcuts), no Windows 10, proporciona uma maneira eficaz de acessar rapidamente arquivos e pastas, sem a necessidade de navegar até a localização original.

Estão corretas as afirmativas

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7Q1078961 | Noções de Informática, Planilhas Eletrônicas, Profissional de Enfermagem II Técnico de Enfermagem, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

Em um escritório, um funcionário está usando o Microsoft Excel para Office 365 para calcular os custos de produção de uma empresa.

Qual das práticas a seguir é uma maneira eficaz de usar fórmulas no Excel para automatizar os cálculos?

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8Q1078962 | Noções de Informática, Editor de Textos, Profissional de Enfermagem II Técnico de Enfermagem, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

Ao criar e formatar documentos no Microsoft Word para Office 365, é fundamental compreender as opções disponíveis para garantir uma apresentação adequada e uma impressão eficiente.

Nesse contexto, analise as afirmativas a seguir sobre formatação e impressão de documentos no Word.

I. O recurso de “Espaçamento entre Linhas” no Word permite ajustar a distância horizontal entre linhas de texto, proporcionando maior legibilidade ou otimizando o espaço no documento.

II. A utilização de estilos de parágrafo no Word oferece uma maneira eficaz de padronizar a formatação, facilitando a consistência visual em todo o documento.

III. A opção “Imprimir em Frente e Verso” no Word possibilita a impressão de documentos em ambos os lados da folha; a impressão pode ser pela margem mais curta ou pela margem mais longa, contribuindo para a economia de papel.

Estão corretas as afirmativas

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9Q1078963 | Noções de Informática, Software, Profissional de Enfermagem II Técnico de Enfermagem, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

Com relação à elaboração de formulários no Google Forms, assinale a alternativa incorreta.

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10Q1078970 | Noções de Informática, Hardware, Analista de Tecnologia da Informação, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

Sobre o conhecimento de hardware de computador, assinale a alternativa correta.
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11Q1032645 | Raciocínio Lógico, Raciocínio Matemático, Nível Médio, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

José tem o número 3 como seu número da sorte. Por essa razão, ao criar as senhas de atendimento da sua padaria, utilizou, sequencialmente, apenas números terminados em 3. Dessa forma, a primeira senha chamada é a de número 3, a segunda é a de número 13, a terceira é a de número 23, e assim por diante, até que se finde o dia e as senhas sejam renovadas. Camila, uma cliente da padaria, aguarda o atendimento na fila, e sua senha é a de número 153.

Nesse dia, quantas pessoas serão atendidas antes de Camila?

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12Q1023195 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Professor de Educação Básica II Inglês, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

Texto associado.

INSTRUCTION: Read the following text to answer question.


Communicative Language Teaching


By Judson Wright


Introduction



Over the last few decades, Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) has become common in classrooms around the world at all levels of ability and with students of all ages. The starting point for the CLT approach is to consider what people actually do with language outside the classroom. Every day, people use language to provide and to ask for information, to make requests, to give and to ask for permission, and for a long list of other functions. In other words, they use language to communicate. […]


The teacher as model


In some approaches to teaching English, the teacher’s main role is to pass on knowledge to students through explanations. In Communicative Language Teaching, the role of the teacher is rather different, although providing clear explanations of language points is still an important part of it. First of all, the teacher acts as a model of good communication skills. This involves asking clear questions, providing clear answers, and giving clear instructions to students. The teacher also models active listening skills, which include making eye contact, listening carefully to what people are saying, checking that listeners understand what’s being said, and responding appropriately. It is the teacher who sets the expectation that these and other communication skills, such as taking turns appropriately in a conversation, are the classroom norm.


Classroom interaction


As in many other classrooms, some of the interaction in the CLT classroom consists of the teacher talking to the whole class while the students listen or respond to the teacher’s questions, particularly when the teacher is explaining a language point. However, CLT is based on the idea that in order to improve students’ communication skills, most of the interaction that teachers need to provide for their students should be classroom tasks that require and develop communication skills. In particular, CLT makes use of roleplays, pair work and group work tasks. These forms of interaction provide some important benefits.


One benefit is that students usually find these forms of interaction motivating and engaging. Pair and group work provide opportunities to focus more on fluency and on content than on accuracy, which often means that students are able to speak more freely than when they are asked to respond to direct questions from the teacher in front of the whole class. These interactions provide a safer space to practise communication skills. The teacher has an important part to play here, ensuring that students avoid focusing on form too much during tasks as well as bringing their students’ focus back onto the content of the interaction rather than correcting each other’s English while carrying out the task


Another benefit is a better use of time. When students are divided into pairs or groups and given a task that each pair or group carries out at the same time, it is a far more efficient and effective use of classroom time than other forms of classroom interaction. It means that all students can be engaged and active at the same time, rather than merely listening to other students respond to the teacher’s questions or prompts, which is a typical interaction in some classrooms. Through pair and group work, each individual student spends far more time using English and practising their communication skills.


Meaningful communication


In order for the interactions to be effective, we need to ensure that successfully completing a task depends on meaningful communication. In other words, each pair and group work task are designed so that there is a real purpose for the interaction, mirroring communicative interactions in the real world. This real purpose might involve a student communicating something about their own life which another student doesn’t know, such as information about their family, or their own opinions on a subject. It might also involve creating an information gap between the students which requires the use of different communication skills. Let’s consider a couple of examples at different levels of English ability that illustrate the idea of meaningful communication.


Imagine a teacher is working with students at an elementary level of English who are learning or practising the names of colours. The teacher produces sheets of paper with perhaps four or five coloured circles on them. Most sheets are different from each other, but each sheet has at least one other that matches it exactly. Each student receives a sheet and is asked not to let other people see their sheet. The task is for each student to find another student whose sheet exactly matches their own. Armed with a simple structure, such as Do you have a … circle?, students mingle around the classroom, asking and answering each other’s questions, until they have each found a matching partner. This type of task can be easily adapted to focus on shapes, body parts, and a range of other lexical sets. Contrast this with a situation where a teacher indicates different objects that the whole class can see and asks questions such as What colour is this? and expects students to respond with the correct colour. In that case, no meaningful communication takes place since all students already know the answer.


[…]


Assessment and correction


During the task, the students’ focus should be on achieving the communicative aim, whether that’s finding someone in the class with matching information, reconstructing a text, or successfully completing a roleplay. The teacher’s role is to employ ongoing informal assessment by monitoring the interactions and making sure that each pair and group stays on task and does not get distracted by trying to correct each other’s use of language. It’s worth making the importance of completing the task explicit at the start of any communicative task. As teachers monitor the students, they should make a note of any errors that they want to focus on after the activity. This is usually most effective when the teacher selects errors that more than one student makes since focusing on these is likely to be of use to more students. While the teacher may choose to ignore most other errors, it is sometimes worth using ‘hot correction’ with individual students. With hot correction, the teacher quickly makes a note of the correct form on a slip of paper and simply places it on the table in front of the student, without interrupting the interaction.


Conclusion


Communicative Language Teaching prepares students for communicative demands outside the classroom using techniques that develop communication skills. In its pure form, some teachers may feel that there is not enough focus on accuracy and language structure to meet their needs and the needs of their students. However, introducing elements of the approach into your classroom and reconsidering your role as a teacher and the types of tasks you ask your students to take part in will motivate and engage your students while developing their communication skills.


Available at: https://www.onestopenglish.com/methodology-theworld-of-elt/communicative-language-teaching/1000116.article. Accessed on: Jan 23rd, 2024.


Concerning assessment in the Communicative Approach, a teacher is encouraged

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13Q1023196 | Inglês, Palavras Conectivas Connective Words, Professor de Educação Básica II Inglês, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

Texto associado.

INSTRUCTION: Read the following text to answer question.


Communicative Language Teaching


By Judson Wright


Introduction



Over the last few decades, Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) has become common in classrooms around the world at all levels of ability and with students of all ages. The starting point for the CLT approach is to consider what people actually do with language outside the classroom. Every day, people use language to provide and to ask for information, to make requests, to give and to ask for permission, and for a long list of other functions. In other words, they use language to communicate. […]


The teacher as model


In some approaches to teaching English, the teacher’s main role is to pass on knowledge to students through explanations. In Communicative Language Teaching, the role of the teacher is rather different, although providing clear explanations of language points is still an important part of it. First of all, the teacher acts as a model of good communication skills. This involves asking clear questions, providing clear answers, and giving clear instructions to students. The teacher also models active listening skills, which include making eye contact, listening carefully to what people are saying, checking that listeners understand what’s being said, and responding appropriately. It is the teacher who sets the expectation that these and other communication skills, such as taking turns appropriately in a conversation, are the classroom norm.


Classroom interaction


As in many other classrooms, some of the interaction in the CLT classroom consists of the teacher talking to the whole class while the students listen or respond to the teacher’s questions, particularly when the teacher is explaining a language point. However, CLT is based on the idea that in order to improve students’ communication skills, most of the interaction that teachers need to provide for their students should be classroom tasks that require and develop communication skills. In particular, CLT makes use of roleplays, pair work and group work tasks. These forms of interaction provide some important benefits.


One benefit is that students usually find these forms of interaction motivating and engaging. Pair and group work provide opportunities to focus more on fluency and on content than on accuracy, which often means that students are able to speak more freely than when they are asked to respond to direct questions from the teacher in front of the whole class. These interactions provide a safer space to practise communication skills. The teacher has an important part to play here, ensuring that students avoid focusing on form too much during tasks as well as bringing their students’ focus back onto the content of the interaction rather than correcting each other’s English while carrying out the task


Another benefit is a better use of time. When students are divided into pairs or groups and given a task that each pair or group carries out at the same time, it is a far more efficient and effective use of classroom time than other forms of classroom interaction. It means that all students can be engaged and active at the same time, rather than merely listening to other students respond to the teacher’s questions or prompts, which is a typical interaction in some classrooms. Through pair and group work, each individual student spends far more time using English and practising their communication skills.


Meaningful communication


In order for the interactions to be effective, we need to ensure that successfully completing a task depends on meaningful communication. In other words, each pair and group work task are designed so that there is a real purpose for the interaction, mirroring communicative interactions in the real world. This real purpose might involve a student communicating something about their own life which another student doesn’t know, such as information about their family, or their own opinions on a subject. It might also involve creating an information gap between the students which requires the use of different communication skills. Let’s consider a couple of examples at different levels of English ability that illustrate the idea of meaningful communication.


Imagine a teacher is working with students at an elementary level of English who are learning or practising the names of colours. The teacher produces sheets of paper with perhaps four or five coloured circles on them. Most sheets are different from each other, but each sheet has at least one other that matches it exactly. Each student receives a sheet and is asked not to let other people see their sheet. The task is for each student to find another student whose sheet exactly matches their own. Armed with a simple structure, such as Do you have a … circle?, students mingle around the classroom, asking and answering each other’s questions, until they have each found a matching partner. This type of task can be easily adapted to focus on shapes, body parts, and a range of other lexical sets. Contrast this with a situation where a teacher indicates different objects that the whole class can see and asks questions such as What colour is this? and expects students to respond with the correct colour. In that case, no meaningful communication takes place since all students already know the answer.


[…]


Assessment and correction


During the task, the students’ focus should be on achieving the communicative aim, whether that’s finding someone in the class with matching information, reconstructing a text, or successfully completing a roleplay. The teacher’s role is to employ ongoing informal assessment by monitoring the interactions and making sure that each pair and group stays on task and does not get distracted by trying to correct each other’s use of language. It’s worth making the importance of completing the task explicit at the start of any communicative task. As teachers monitor the students, they should make a note of any errors that they want to focus on after the activity. This is usually most effective when the teacher selects errors that more than one student makes since focusing on these is likely to be of use to more students. While the teacher may choose to ignore most other errors, it is sometimes worth using ‘hot correction’ with individual students. With hot correction, the teacher quickly makes a note of the correct form on a slip of paper and simply places it on the table in front of the student, without interrupting the interaction.


Conclusion


Communicative Language Teaching prepares students for communicative demands outside the classroom using techniques that develop communication skills. In its pure form, some teachers may feel that there is not enough focus on accuracy and language structure to meet their needs and the needs of their students. However, introducing elements of the approach into your classroom and reconsidering your role as a teacher and the types of tasks you ask your students to take part in will motivate and engage your students while developing their communication skills.


Available at: https://www.onestopenglish.com/methodology-theworld-of-elt/communicative-language-teaching/1000116.article. Accessed on: Jan 23rd, 2024.


The discourse marker however in “However, introducing elements of the approach into your classroom and reconsidering your role as a teacher and the types of tasks you ask your students to take part in will motivate and engage your students while developing their communication skills.” is closest in meaning to

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14Q1033436 | Raciocínio Lógico, Análise Combinatória em Raciocínio Lógico, Professor de Educação Básica II Educação Física, Prefeitura de Carlos Chagas MG, FUNDEP Gestão de Concursos, 2024

Na brincadeira de “rouba bandeira”, os alunos são divididos em duas vezes. Cada um fica com um lado da quadra. Na linha de fundo de cada espaço, é fincada a bandeira do tempo. O objetivo é roubar a bandeira adversária e proteger a sua atravessando o campo adversário correndo.

Na realização do torneio interno de “rouba bandeira” para os alunos do Ensino Fundamental Anos Finais, o professor de Educação Física recebeu 78 inscrições, ou seja, 78 vezes específicas na disputa colegial. O sistema de disputa adotado foi o eliminatório simples.

Para conhecer a equipe campeã do torneio, é correto afirmar que foram realizados

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