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1Q1023857 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Docente I Língua Estrangeira Inglês, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Texto associado.
Answer question according to TEXT 1 below.

TEXT 1
TRUE STORIES – The School teacher

1 IT'S HAPPENED TO me half a dozen times, lately. I'm walking home through the Edinburgh Gardens and I see them heading towards me. Heavy kids, eight of them, maybe ten. I keep walking, but I keep my eyes on them, and my feet wait for the sign to take off.
2 They are Greeks and Italians, all adolescents, all wearing green or maroon cardigans with a double black stripe round the chest, Levis or Wranglers that fit just right, showing a bit of sock and reddish shoes with big heels. I move across to the outside of the footpath to let them pass. They spread out a little. They're close enough now in the almost-dark for me to see their faces.
3 And it's all right, because the front one is Chris, from Fitzroy High, and he says, 'Hello, miss!' and the others are kids who have grinned and nodded at me a hundred times in the yard at school.
4 I had taught migrants before, but Fitzroy High is one of those legendary inner-suburban schools which can no longer be properly described as Australian. In none of the classes I took were there more than four kids with Australian names. A blond head was a surprise. The administration battled to assimilate these kids into recognizable moulds. In a hundred subtle ways they were defeated.
5 Most of the girls had pierced ears and had worn gold earrings since they were babies. The line was that plain gold sleepers were the only ear decorations allowed. At the time when it was fashionable, in Australia, to wear a zillion colored plastic bangles up your arm, teachers strove hopelessly to prevent this display of gaiety at school. The girls went on wearing them and pulled their sleeves down when they saw a senior mistress coming.
6 There were weekly segregated assemblies. I don't know what they told the boys, but at one girls' assembly I actually heard the senior mistress say, 'As girls we must be modest, quiet, hardworking and well-groomed at all times'.
7 What astonished me was the stubbornness of the kids' resistance to the rules. They didn't organize or protest. They defied. If the pressure got too much for them, they stayed away. And yet they hated to be suspended. One boy was suspended for a week, and every day I'd see him leaning against my front fence, staring wistfully at the school where his mates were tight-roping their way dangerously through the day.
8 In the three other schools I'd taught at, I'd been an authoritarian, a good disciplinarian. It wasn't only political or educational thinking that changed my attitude at Fitzroy High. It was the kids themselves. I suppose I fell in love with the whole nine hundred of them. In other schools, I'd known kids who were 'trouble-makers' or 'over-achievers', or ‘irresponsible' or 'antisocial. But somehow the kids at Fitzroy cut right through those categories.
9 To begin with, they made me laugh. I can't remember ever knowing such exuberant, merry kids. Every class had more than its share of natural clowns. The plays they invented were full of hilarious delight. In a second-form class I had for a year, two Italian boys called Claudio and Joseph used to present weekly plays so excruciatingly funny that we lay across the desks aching and wiping our eyes.
10 A kid called Ilya wrote wonderful, magical stories; he could write fairy tales his grandparents had told him in Yugoslavia. Lemonia could break your heart with a story about a lost fountain pen, and Dora with an account of her dreams. Their English may have been rocky, but there was a pure, delicate humour lying bone-deep in them that nothing could corrupt.

GARNER, Helen. True Stories. Melbourne, Australia: The Publishing Company, 2013, pp. 26-28. Adapted.
The two overall themes which emerge from the narrative in text 1 are:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

2Q1023858 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Docente I Língua Estrangeira Inglês, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Texto associado.
Answer question according to TEXT 1 below.

TEXT 1
TRUE STORIES – The School teacher

1 IT'S HAPPENED TO me half a dozen times, lately. I'm walking home through the Edinburgh Gardens and I see them heading towards me. Heavy kids, eight of them, maybe ten. I keep walking, but I keep my eyes on them, and my feet wait for the sign to take off.
2 They are Greeks and Italians, all adolescents, all wearing green or maroon cardigans with a double black stripe round the chest, Levis or Wranglers that fit just right, showing a bit of sock and reddish shoes with big heels. I move across to the outside of the footpath to let them pass. They spread out a little. They're close enough now in the almost-dark for me to see their faces.
3 And it's all right, because the front one is Chris, from Fitzroy High, and he says, 'Hello, miss!' and the others are kids who have grinned and nodded at me a hundred times in the yard at school.
4 I had taught migrants before, but Fitzroy High is one of those legendary inner-suburban schools which can no longer be properly described as Australian. In none of the classes I took were there more than four kids with Australian names. A blond head was a surprise. The administration battled to assimilate these kids into recognizable moulds. In a hundred subtle ways they were defeated.
5 Most of the girls had pierced ears and had worn gold earrings since they were babies. The line was that plain gold sleepers were the only ear decorations allowed. At the time when it was fashionable, in Australia, to wear a zillion colored plastic bangles up your arm, teachers strove hopelessly to prevent this display of gaiety at school. The girls went on wearing them and pulled their sleeves down when they saw a senior mistress coming.
6 There were weekly segregated assemblies. I don't know what they told the boys, but at one girls' assembly I actually heard the senior mistress say, 'As girls we must be modest, quiet, hardworking and well-groomed at all times'.
7 What astonished me was the stubbornness of the kids' resistance to the rules. They didn't organize or protest. They defied. If the pressure got too much for them, they stayed away. And yet they hated to be suspended. One boy was suspended for a week, and every day I'd see him leaning against my front fence, staring wistfully at the school where his mates were tight-roping their way dangerously through the day.
8 In the three other schools I'd taught at, I'd been an authoritarian, a good disciplinarian. It wasn't only political or educational thinking that changed my attitude at Fitzroy High. It was the kids themselves. I suppose I fell in love with the whole nine hundred of them. In other schools, I'd known kids who were 'trouble-makers' or 'over-achievers', or ‘irresponsible' or 'antisocial. But somehow the kids at Fitzroy cut right through those categories.
9 To begin with, they made me laugh. I can't remember ever knowing such exuberant, merry kids. Every class had more than its share of natural clowns. The plays they invented were full of hilarious delight. In a second-form class I had for a year, two Italian boys called Claudio and Joseph used to present weekly plays so excruciatingly funny that we lay across the desks aching and wiping our eyes.
10 A kid called Ilya wrote wonderful, magical stories; he could write fairy tales his grandparents had told him in Yugoslavia. Lemonia could break your heart with a story about a lost fountain pen, and Dora with an account of her dreams. Their English may have been rocky, but there was a pure, delicate humour lying bone-deep in them that nothing could corrupt.

GARNER, Helen. True Stories. Melbourne, Australia: The Publishing Company, 2013, pp. 26-28. Adapted.
In the first and second paragraphs, the narrator describes a scene which may provoke, in the reader, a feeling of suspenseful expectation. This may be explained by readers’ ‘shared preconceived notions’ involving:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

3Q1023859 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Docente I Língua Estrangeira Inglês, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Texto associado.
Answer question according to TEXT 1 below.

TEXT 1
TRUE STORIES – The School teacher

1 IT'S HAPPENED TO me half a dozen times, lately. I'm walking home through the Edinburgh Gardens and I see them heading towards me. Heavy kids, eight of them, maybe ten. I keep walking, but I keep my eyes on them, and my feet wait for the sign to take off.
2 They are Greeks and Italians, all adolescents, all wearing green or maroon cardigans with a double black stripe round the chest, Levis or Wranglers that fit just right, showing a bit of sock and reddish shoes with big heels. I move across to the outside of the footpath to let them pass. They spread out a little. They're close enough now in the almost-dark for me to see their faces.
3 And it's all right, because the front one is Chris, from Fitzroy High, and he says, 'Hello, miss!' and the others are kids who have grinned and nodded at me a hundred times in the yard at school.
4 I had taught migrants before, but Fitzroy High is one of those legendary inner-suburban schools which can no longer be properly described as Australian. In none of the classes I took were there more than four kids with Australian names. A blond head was a surprise. The administration battled to assimilate these kids into recognizable moulds. In a hundred subtle ways they were defeated.
5 Most of the girls had pierced ears and had worn gold earrings since they were babies. The line was that plain gold sleepers were the only ear decorations allowed. At the time when it was fashionable, in Australia, to wear a zillion colored plastic bangles up your arm, teachers strove hopelessly to prevent this display of gaiety at school. The girls went on wearing them and pulled their sleeves down when they saw a senior mistress coming.
6 There were weekly segregated assemblies. I don't know what they told the boys, but at one girls' assembly I actually heard the senior mistress say, 'As girls we must be modest, quiet, hardworking and well-groomed at all times'.
7 What astonished me was the stubbornness of the kids' resistance to the rules. They didn't organize or protest. They defied. If the pressure got too much for them, they stayed away. And yet they hated to be suspended. One boy was suspended for a week, and every day I'd see him leaning against my front fence, staring wistfully at the school where his mates were tight-roping their way dangerously through the day.
8 In the three other schools I'd taught at, I'd been an authoritarian, a good disciplinarian. It wasn't only political or educational thinking that changed my attitude at Fitzroy High. It was the kids themselves. I suppose I fell in love with the whole nine hundred of them. In other schools, I'd known kids who were 'trouble-makers' or 'over-achievers', or ‘irresponsible' or 'antisocial. But somehow the kids at Fitzroy cut right through those categories.
9 To begin with, they made me laugh. I can't remember ever knowing such exuberant, merry kids. Every class had more than its share of natural clowns. The plays they invented were full of hilarious delight. In a second-form class I had for a year, two Italian boys called Claudio and Joseph used to present weekly plays so excruciatingly funny that we lay across the desks aching and wiping our eyes.
10 A kid called Ilya wrote wonderful, magical stories; he could write fairy tales his grandparents had told him in Yugoslavia. Lemonia could break your heart with a story about a lost fountain pen, and Dora with an account of her dreams. Their English may have been rocky, but there was a pure, delicate humour lying bone-deep in them that nothing could corrupt.

GARNER, Helen. True Stories. Melbourne, Australia: The Publishing Company, 2013, pp. 26-28. Adapted.
The utterance, extracted from the text, which contributes to the rupture of the somewhat tense atmosphere created in the 1st and 2nd paragraphs is:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

4Q1023860 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Docente I Língua Estrangeira Inglês, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Texto associado.
Answer question according to TEXT 1 below.

TEXT 1
TRUE STORIES – The School teacher

1 IT'S HAPPENED TO me half a dozen times, lately. I'm walking home through the Edinburgh Gardens and I see them heading towards me. Heavy kids, eight of them, maybe ten. I keep walking, but I keep my eyes on them, and my feet wait for the sign to take off.
2 They are Greeks and Italians, all adolescents, all wearing green or maroon cardigans with a double black stripe round the chest, Levis or Wranglers that fit just right, showing a bit of sock and reddish shoes with big heels. I move across to the outside of the footpath to let them pass. They spread out a little. They're close enough now in the almost-dark for me to see their faces.
3 And it's all right, because the front one is Chris, from Fitzroy High, and he says, 'Hello, miss!' and the others are kids who have grinned and nodded at me a hundred times in the yard at school.
4 I had taught migrants before, but Fitzroy High is one of those legendary inner-suburban schools which can no longer be properly described as Australian. In none of the classes I took were there more than four kids with Australian names. A blond head was a surprise. The administration battled to assimilate these kids into recognizable moulds. In a hundred subtle ways they were defeated.
5 Most of the girls had pierced ears and had worn gold earrings since they were babies. The line was that plain gold sleepers were the only ear decorations allowed. At the time when it was fashionable, in Australia, to wear a zillion colored plastic bangles up your arm, teachers strove hopelessly to prevent this display of gaiety at school. The girls went on wearing them and pulled their sleeves down when they saw a senior mistress coming.
6 There were weekly segregated assemblies. I don't know what they told the boys, but at one girls' assembly I actually heard the senior mistress say, 'As girls we must be modest, quiet, hardworking and well-groomed at all times'.
7 What astonished me was the stubbornness of the kids' resistance to the rules. They didn't organize or protest. They defied. If the pressure got too much for them, they stayed away. And yet they hated to be suspended. One boy was suspended for a week, and every day I'd see him leaning against my front fence, staring wistfully at the school where his mates were tight-roping their way dangerously through the day.
8 In the three other schools I'd taught at, I'd been an authoritarian, a good disciplinarian. It wasn't only political or educational thinking that changed my attitude at Fitzroy High. It was the kids themselves. I suppose I fell in love with the whole nine hundred of them. In other schools, I'd known kids who were 'trouble-makers' or 'over-achievers', or ‘irresponsible' or 'antisocial. But somehow the kids at Fitzroy cut right through those categories.
9 To begin with, they made me laugh. I can't remember ever knowing such exuberant, merry kids. Every class had more than its share of natural clowns. The plays they invented were full of hilarious delight. In a second-form class I had for a year, two Italian boys called Claudio and Joseph used to present weekly plays so excruciatingly funny that we lay across the desks aching and wiping our eyes.
10 A kid called Ilya wrote wonderful, magical stories; he could write fairy tales his grandparents had told him in Yugoslavia. Lemonia could break your heart with a story about a lost fountain pen, and Dora with an account of her dreams. Their English may have been rocky, but there was a pure, delicate humour lying bone-deep in them that nothing could corrupt.

GARNER, Helen. True Stories. Melbourne, Australia: The Publishing Company, 2013, pp. 26-28. Adapted.
Question refer to the following passage, in paragraph 4:

A blond head was a surprise. The administration battled to assimilate these kids into recognizable moulds. In a hundred subtle ways they were defeated.

A metonymy, and two metaphorical expressions related to the concept of war are, respectively,
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

5Q1023861 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Docente I Língua Estrangeira Inglês, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Texto associado.
Question relate to teaching skills and abilities:
Baladeli and Ferreira (2012) defend that due to the increasingly use of web 2.0 technologies in contemporary society, new digital literacies need to be approached in both pre-service and in-service teacher education. The concept of digital literacy can be defined as:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

6Q1023862 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Docente I Língua Estrangeira Inglês, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Texto associado.
Question relate to teaching skills and abilities:
According to Motta-Roth (2006) the concept of genre has been a common reference in official documents for education, especially in relation to the PCNs of Foreign Languages, Arts and Computing. However, she states that there is a “fluctuation in the concept of genre in these references” (p. 498). Within these concepts, the one(s) that she considers the most appropriate is/are:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

7Q1023863 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Docente I Língua Estrangeira Inglês, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Texto associado.
Question relate to teaching skills and abilities:
Orlando and Ferreira (2013) discuss the contributions of new literacies and multiliteracies studies to teacher education regarding identity issues. The authors, based on New Literacies theory, defend that the role of the language teacher in contemporary society is to:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

8Q1023864 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Docente I Língua Estrangeira Inglês, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Texto associado.
Question relate to teaching skills and abilities:
In the chapter “Da aplicação de Linguística à Linguística Aplicada Indisciplinar”, Moita Lopes (2009) proposes the term “Linguística Aplicada Indisciplinar” as an area of study that:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

9Q1023865 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Docente I Língua Estrangeira Inglês, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Texto associado.
Question relate to teaching skills and abilities:
In the introduction of the book “Teaching to Transgress: education as the practice of freedom”, bell hooks (2003) shares her experience as a student in “all-black grade schools” and “desegregated, white schools” and then at undergraduate and graduate schools in the U.S. How were these experiences different?
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

10Q1023866 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Docente I Língua Estrangeira Inglês, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Texto associado.
Question relate to teaching skills and abilities:
In the same book, bell hooks (2003, p. 11) states that “Teaching is a performative act”. This means that teachers:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

11Q893653 | Pedagogia, Base Nacional Comum Curricular BNCC, Docente II, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Entre as opções abaixo, assinale a medida que está de acordo com as disposições do art. 3º, inciso IV, da Constituição Federal, que repudiam o preconceito e quaisquer formas de discriminação, e reconhecem a singularidade irredutível de todos os indivíduos, especialmente no contexto das Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais (DCN) étnico-raciais.
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

12Q893654 | Pedagogia, Base Nacional Comum Curricular BNCC, Docente II, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

As Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais para a Educação Básica podem ser consideradas:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

13Q893655 | Pedagogia, Plano Nacional de Educação PNE, Docente II, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Entre as opções abaixo, assinale aquela em que Paulo Ghraldelli Jr, descreveu de como se estruturou o sistema educacional no Império.
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

14Q893656 | Pedagogia, Base Nacional Comum Curricular BNCC, Docente II, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Os princípios que NÃO são mencionados como norteadores das políticas educativas e das ações pedagógicas, de acordo com as Diretrizes Nacionais para a Educação Básica, são:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

15Q893657 | Pedagogia, Normas Constitucionais do Direito à Educação, Docente II, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

O ensino religioso nas escolas públicas de ensino fundamental, de acordo com o art. 210 da Constituição Federal, é:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

16Q893658 | Pedagogia, Plano Nacional de Educação PNE, Docente II, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

O período histórico que, de acordo com Gatti (2009), as escolas normais no Brasil começaram a ser valorizadas, é a:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

17Q893659 | Pedagogia, Lei nº 9394 de 1996, Docente II, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Conforme o art. 34 da Lei de Diretrizes e Bases da Educação Nacional (LDB), sobre a jornada escolar no ensino fundamental, assinale a opção correta.
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

18Q893660 | Pedagogia, Lei nº 9394 de 1996, Docente II, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Sobre o financiamento da educação, a porcentagem mínima que a União deve aplicar anualmente na manutenção e no desenvolvimento do ensino público, de acordo com o art. 69 da Lei nº 9.394/96, é:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

19Q893661 | Pedagogia, Base Nacional Comum Curricular BNCC, Docente II, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

Entre as opções abaixo, a que melhor reflete a relação entre os brinquedos, o brincar e a criança, de acordo com os estudos de Benjamin e as Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais para a Educação Infantil, é:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

20Q893662 | Pedagogia, Lei nº 9394 de 1996, Docente II, Prefeitura de Maricá RJ, COSEAC, 2024

O art. 38, seção V – Da Educação de Jovens e Adultos, da Lei de Diretrizes e Bases nº 9.394/96, aponta que “Os sistemas de ensino manterão cursos e exames supletivos, que compreenderão a base nacional comum do currículo, habilitando ao prosseguimento de estudos em caráter regular”. Os exames a que se refere esse artigo realizar-se-ão:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️
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