Questões de Concurso Sobre interpretação de texto | reading comprehension em inglês

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Q2431941 Inglês

Plurilingualism and translanguaging: commonalities and divergences


Both plurilingual and translanguaging pedagogical practices in the education of language minoritized students remain controversial, for schools have a monolingual and monoglossic tradition that is hard to disrupt, even when the disrupting stance brings success to learners. At issue is the national identity that schools are supposed to develop in their students, and the Eurocentric system of knowledge, circulated through standardized named languages, that continues to impose what Quijano (2000) has called a coloniality of power.


All theories emerge from a place, an experience, a time, and a position, and in this case, plurilingualism and translanguaging have developed, as we have seen, from different loci of enunciation. But concepts do not remain static in a time and place, as educators and researchers take them up, as they travel, and as educators develop alternative practices. Thus, plurilingual and translanguaging pedagogical practices sometimes look the same, and sometimes they even have the same practical goals. For example, educators who say they use plurilingual pedagogical practices might insist on developing bilingual identities, and not solely use plurilingualism as a scaffold. And educators who claim to use translanguaging pedagogical practices sometimes use them only as a scaffold to the dominant language, not grasping its potential. In the United States, translanguaging pedagogies are often used in English-as-a-Second Language programs only as a scaffold. And although the potential for translanguaging is more likely to be found in bilingual education programs, this is also at times elusive. The potential is curtailed, for example, by the strict language allocation policies that have accompanied the growth of dual language education programs in the last decade in the USA, which come close to the neoliberal understanding of multilingualism espoused in the European Union.


It is important to keep the conceptual distinctions between plurilingualism and translanguaging at the forefront as we develop ways of enacting them in practice, even when pedagogies may turn out to look the same. Because the theoretical stance of translanguaging brings forth and affirms dynamic multilingual realities, it offers the potential to transform minoritized communities sense of self that the concept of plurilingualism may not always do. The purpose of translanguaging could be transformative of socio-political and socio-educational structures that legitimize the language hierarchies that exclude minoritized bilingual students and the epistemological understandings that render them invisible. In its theoretical formulation, translanguaging disrupts the concept of named languages and the power hierarchies in which languages are positioned. But the issue for the future is whether school authorities will allow translanguaging to achieve its potential, or whether it will silence it as simply another kind of scaffold. To the degree that educators act on translanguaging with political intent, it will continue to crack some openings and to open opportunities for bilingual students. Otherwise, the present conceptual differences between plurilingualism and translanguaging will be erased.


Source: GARCÍA, Ofelia; OTHEGUY, Ricardo. Plurilingualism and translanguaging: Commonalities and divergences. International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, v. 23, n. 1, p. 17-35, 2020.


Garcia e Otheguy (2020)

Considering the excerpt "All theories emerge from a place, an experience, a time, and a position, and in this case, plurilingualism and translanguaging have developed, as we have seen, from different loci of enunciation.", analyze the statements below:


I.According to the text, plurilingualism and translanguaging have things in common but also have controversies.

II.If you had to turn this excerpt into reported speech "plurilingualism and translanguaging have developed from different loci of enunciation" you would have the following result: "García and Otherguy said that plurilingualism and translanguaging had have developed from different loci of enunciation".

III.The second sillable of the word 'loci' can be pronounced as 'sa?', but also can be pronounced as 'ka?'.


It is correct what is state in:

Alternativas
Q2431940 Inglês

Plurilingualism and translanguaging: commonalities and divergences


Both plurilingual and translanguaging pedagogical practices in the education of language minoritized students remain controversial, for schools have a monolingual and monoglossic tradition that is hard to disrupt, even when the disrupting stance brings success to learners. At issue is the national identity that schools are supposed to develop in their students, and the Eurocentric system of knowledge, circulated through standardized named languages, that continues to impose what Quijano (2000) has called a coloniality of power.


All theories emerge from a place, an experience, a time, and a position, and in this case, plurilingualism and translanguaging have developed, as we have seen, from different loci of enunciation. But concepts do not remain static in a time and place, as educators and researchers take them up, as they travel, and as educators develop alternative practices. Thus, plurilingual and translanguaging pedagogical practices sometimes look the same, and sometimes they even have the same practical goals. For example, educators who say they use plurilingual pedagogical practices might insist on developing bilingual identities, and not solely use plurilingualism as a scaffold. And educators who claim to use translanguaging pedagogical practices sometimes use them only as a scaffold to the dominant language, not grasping its potential. In the United States, translanguaging pedagogies are often used in English-as-a-Second Language programs only as a scaffold. And although the potential for translanguaging is more likely to be found in bilingual education programs, this is also at times elusive. The potential is curtailed, for example, by the strict language allocation policies that have accompanied the growth of dual language education programs in the last decade in the USA, which come close to the neoliberal understanding of multilingualism espoused in the European Union.


It is important to keep the conceptual distinctions between plurilingualism and translanguaging at the forefront as we develop ways of enacting them in practice, even when pedagogies may turn out to look the same. Because the theoretical stance of translanguaging brings forth and affirms dynamic multilingual realities, it offers the potential to transform minoritized communities sense of self that the concept of plurilingualism may not always do. The purpose of translanguaging could be transformative of socio-political and socio-educational structures that legitimize the language hierarchies that exclude minoritized bilingual students and the epistemological understandings that render them invisible. In its theoretical formulation, translanguaging disrupts the concept of named languages and the power hierarchies in which languages are positioned. But the issue for the future is whether school authorities will allow translanguaging to achieve its potential, or whether it will silence it as simply another kind of scaffold. To the degree that educators act on translanguaging with political intent, it will continue to crack some openings and to open opportunities for bilingual students. Otherwise, the present conceptual differences between plurilingualism and translanguaging will be erased.


Source: GARCÍA, Ofelia; OTHEGUY, Ricardo. Plurilingualism and translanguaging: Commonalities and divergences. International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, v. 23, n. 1, p. 17-35, 2020.


Garcia e Otheguy (2020)

According to the text above, it is possible to state that:

Alternativas
Q2431293 Inglês

Sorry for the delayed response


01 Have ___ (1) e-mail you’ve been meaning (but not really) to reply to? Read below for some

02 reasons why your response has been delayed:

03 I totally meant to respond to this earlier, but I didn’t know ___ (2) answer to your question

04 and I kept not caring enough to ask anyone. Now ___ (3) weird amount of time has passed,

05 so I’m going to loop Laura (cc’d) into this e-mail thread to see if she can handle this. Laura?

06 Sorry for ___ (4) delay! I put off answering your e-mail until I had ___ (5) even more tedious

07 task that I wanted to avoid. Thanks!

08 So sorry that I’m just getting to this now. There were six other people on this e-mail thread

09 and I was hoping that one of them would answer your question and I could just go on living

10 my life.


(Available at: https://www.instagram.com/p/CsHm2YnteFa/ – text especially adapted for this test).

Analyze the following statements about the highlighted word “enough” (l. 04):


I. It is an adjective and can only be used with nouns.

II. It is an adverb, and it can modify adjectives and verbs.

III. It should be placed after the verb.


Which ones are correct?

Alternativas
Q2431290 Inglês

Sorry for the delayed response


01 Have ___ (1) e-mail you’ve been meaning (but not really) to reply to? Read below for some

02 reasons why your response has been delayed:

03 I totally meant to respond to this earlier, but I didn’t know ___ (2) answer to your question

04 and I kept not caring enough to ask anyone. Now ___ (3) weird amount of time has passed,

05 so I’m going to loop Laura (cc’d) into this e-mail thread to see if she can handle this. Laura?

06 Sorry for ___ (4) delay! I put off answering your e-mail until I had ___ (5) even more tedious

07 task that I wanted to avoid. Thanks!

08 So sorry that I’m just getting to this now. There were six other people on this e-mail thread

09 and I was hoping that one of them would answer your question and I could just go on living

10 my life.


(Available at: https://www.instagram.com/p/CsHm2YnteFa/ – text especially adapted for this test).

Mark the INCORRECT alternative about the text.

Alternativas
Q2431204 Inglês

Instruction: answer questions 31 to 40 based on the following text. The highlights throughout the text are cited in the questions.


He donated blood and saved the lives of 2.4 million babies


01 Most people get a gold watch when they retire. James Harrison deserves so much more than

02 that. Known as the “Man With the Golden Arm,” Harrison has donated blood nearly every week

03 for 60 years, and after all those donations, the 81-year-old Australian man “retired” Friday.

04 According to the Australian Red Cross Blood Service, he has helped save the lives of more than

05 2.4 million Australian babies because his blood has unique, disease-fighting antibodies.

06 Harrison’s antibodies have been used to develop an injection called Anti-D, which helps

07 fight against rhesus disease. This disease is a condition where a pregnant woman has rhesus-

08 negative blood (RhD negative) and the baby in her womb has rhesus-positive blood (RhD

09 positive), inherited from its father. If the mother has been sensitized to rhesus-positive blood,

10 usually during a previous pregnancy with a rhesus-positive baby, she may produce antibodies

11 that destroy the baby’s “foreign” blood cells. In the worst cases, it can result in brain damage,

12 or death, for the babies.

13 Harrison’s remarkable gift of giving started when he had major chest surgery when he was

14 just 14. Blood donations saved his life, so he pledged to become a blood donor. A few years

15 later, doctors discovered his blood contained the antibody which could be used to create Anti-D

16 injections, so he switched over to making blood plasma donations to help as many people as

17 possible. Doctors aren’t exactly sure why Harrison has this rare blood type, but they think it

18 might be from the transfusions he received when he was 14, after his surgery. He’s one of no

19 more than 50 people in Australia known to have the antibodies, according to the blood service.

20 “In Australia, up until about 1967, there were literally thousands of babies dying each year,

21 doctors didn’t know why, and it was awful.” Jemma Falkenmire, of the Australian Red Cross

22 Blood Service, told CNN. “Australia was one of the first countries to discover a blood donor with

23 this antibody, so it was quite revolutionary at the time.”

24 The blood service estimates Harrison saved more than two million lives, and for that, he is

25 considered a national hero in Australia. He’s won numerous awards for his generosity, including

26 the Medal of the Order of Australia, one of the country’s most prestigious honors. Now that

27 Harrison has given his last blood donation (in Australia you can’t donate blood past the age of

28 81), Falkenmire and others hope people with similar antibodies in their blood will step up and

29 donate.


(Available at: https://edition.cnn.com/2018/05/11/health/james-harrison-blood-donor-retires-trnd/index.html – text especially adapted for this test).

Considering the use of the conditional sentences in the English language, which of the following alternatives expresses something that is likely to happen?

Alternativas
Q2431201 Inglês

Instruction: answer questions 31 to 40 based on the following text. The highlights throughout the text are cited in the questions.


He donated blood and saved the lives of 2.4 million babies


01 Most people get a gold watch when they retire. James Harrison deserves so much more than

02 that. Known as the “Man With the Golden Arm,” Harrison has donated blood nearly every week

03 for 60 years, and after all those donations, the 81-year-old Australian man “retired” Friday.

04 According to the Australian Red Cross Blood Service, he has helped save the lives of more than

05 2.4 million Australian babies because his blood has unique, disease-fighting antibodies.

06 Harrison’s antibodies have been used to develop an injection called Anti-D, which helps

07 fight against rhesus disease. This disease is a condition where a pregnant woman has rhesus-

08 negative blood (RhD negative) and the baby in her womb has rhesus-positive blood (RhD

09 positive), inherited from its father. If the mother has been sensitized to rhesus-positive blood,

10 usually during a previous pregnancy with a rhesus-positive baby, she may produce antibodies

11 that destroy the baby’s “foreign” blood cells. In the worst cases, it can result in brain damage,

12 or death, for the babies.

13 Harrison’s remarkable gift of giving started when he had major chest surgery when he was

14 just 14. Blood donations saved his life, so he pledged to become a blood donor. A few years

15 later, doctors discovered his blood contained the antibody which could be used to create Anti-D

16 injections, so he switched over to making blood plasma donations to help as many people as

17 possible. Doctors aren’t exactly sure why Harrison has this rare blood type, but they think it

18 might be from the transfusions he received when he was 14, after his surgery. He’s one of no

19 more than 50 people in Australia known to have the antibodies, according to the blood service.

20 “In Australia, up until about 1967, there were literally thousands of babies dying each year,

21 doctors didn’t know why, and it was awful.” Jemma Falkenmire, of the Australian Red Cross

22 Blood Service, told CNN. “Australia was one of the first countries to discover a blood donor with

23 this antibody, so it was quite revolutionary at the time.”

24 The blood service estimates Harrison saved more than two million lives, and for that, he is

25 considered a national hero in Australia. He’s won numerous awards for his generosity, including

26 the Medal of the Order of Australia, one of the country’s most prestigious honors. Now that

27 Harrison has given his last blood donation (in Australia you can’t donate blood past the age of

28 81), Falkenmire and others hope people with similar antibodies in their blood will step up and

29 donate.


(Available at: https://edition.cnn.com/2018/05/11/health/james-harrison-blood-donor-retires-trnd/index.html – text especially adapted for this test).

Mark the correct alternative which the word “switch” is used with the same meaning as the highlighted word in line 16.

Alternativas
Q2431200 Inglês

Instruction: answer questions 31 to 40 based on the following text. The highlights throughout the text are cited in the questions.


He donated blood and saved the lives of 2.4 million babies


01 Most people get a gold watch when they retire. James Harrison deserves so much more than

02 that. Known as the “Man With the Golden Arm,” Harrison has donated blood nearly every week

03 for 60 years, and after all those donations, the 81-year-old Australian man “retired” Friday.

04 According to the Australian Red Cross Blood Service, he has helped save the lives of more than

05 2.4 million Australian babies because his blood has unique, disease-fighting antibodies.

06 Harrison’s antibodies have been used to develop an injection called Anti-D, which helps

07 fight against rhesus disease. This disease is a condition where a pregnant woman has rhesus-

08 negative blood (RhD negative) and the baby in her womb has rhesus-positive blood (RhD

09 positive), inherited from its father. If the mother has been sensitized to rhesus-positive blood,

10 usually during a previous pregnancy with a rhesus-positive baby, she may produce antibodies

11 that destroy the baby’s “foreign” blood cells. In the worst cases, it can result in brain damage,

12 or death, for the babies.

13 Harrison’s remarkable gift of giving started when he had major chest surgery when he was

14 just 14. Blood donations saved his life, so he pledged to become a blood donor. A few years

15 later, doctors discovered his blood contained the antibody which could be used to create Anti-D

16 injections, so he switched over to making blood plasma donations to help as many people as

17 possible. Doctors aren’t exactly sure why Harrison has this rare blood type, but they think it

18 might be from the transfusions he received when he was 14, after his surgery. He’s one of no

19 more than 50 people in Australia known to have the antibodies, according to the blood service.

20 “In Australia, up until about 1967, there were literally thousands of babies dying each year,

21 doctors didn’t know why, and it was awful.” Jemma Falkenmire, of the Australian Red Cross

22 Blood Service, told CNN. “Australia was one of the first countries to discover a blood donor with

23 this antibody, so it was quite revolutionary at the time.”

24 The blood service estimates Harrison saved more than two million lives, and for that, he is

25 considered a national hero in Australia. He’s won numerous awards for his generosity, including

26 the Medal of the Order of Australia, one of the country’s most prestigious honors. Now that

27 Harrison has given his last blood donation (in Australia you can’t donate blood past the age of

28 81), Falkenmire and others hope people with similar antibodies in their blood will step up and

29 donate.


(Available at: https://edition.cnn.com/2018/05/11/health/james-harrison-blood-donor-retires-trnd/index.html – text especially adapted for this test).

Consider the structure “disease-fighting antibodies”. Why is there a hyphen in “disease-fighting”?

Alternativas
Q2431198 Inglês

Instruction: answer questions 31 to 40 based on the following text. The highlights throughout the text are cited in the questions.


He donated blood and saved the lives of 2.4 million babies


01 Most people get a gold watch when they retire. James Harrison deserves so much more than

02 that. Known as the “Man With the Golden Arm,” Harrison has donated blood nearly every week

03 for 60 years, and after all those donations, the 81-year-old Australian man “retired” Friday.

04 According to the Australian Red Cross Blood Service, he has helped save the lives of more than

05 2.4 million Australian babies because his blood has unique, disease-fighting antibodies.

06 Harrison’s antibodies have been used to develop an injection called Anti-D, which helps

07 fight against rhesus disease. This disease is a condition where a pregnant woman has rhesus-

08 negative blood (RhD negative) and the baby in her womb has rhesus-positive blood (RhD

09 positive), inherited from its father. If the mother has been sensitized to rhesus-positive blood,

10 usually during a previous pregnancy with a rhesus-positive baby, she may produce antibodies

11 that destroy the baby’s “foreign” blood cells. In the worst cases, it can result in brain damage,

12 or death, for the babies.

13 Harrison’s remarkable gift of giving started when he had major chest surgery when he was

14 just 14. Blood donations saved his life, so he pledged to become a blood donor. A few years

15 later, doctors discovered his blood contained the antibody which could be used to create Anti-D

16 injections, so he switched over to making blood plasma donations to help as many people as

17 possible. Doctors aren’t exactly sure why Harrison has this rare blood type, but they think it

18 might be from the transfusions he received when he was 14, after his surgery. He’s one of no

19 more than 50 people in Australia known to have the antibodies, according to the blood service.

20 “In Australia, up until about 1967, there were literally thousands of babies dying each year,

21 doctors didn’t know why, and it was awful.” Jemma Falkenmire, of the Australian Red Cross

22 Blood Service, told CNN. “Australia was one of the first countries to discover a blood donor with

23 this antibody, so it was quite revolutionary at the time.”

24 The blood service estimates Harrison saved more than two million lives, and for that, he is

25 considered a national hero in Australia. He’s won numerous awards for his generosity, including

26 the Medal of the Order of Australia, one of the country’s most prestigious honors. Now that

27 Harrison has given his last blood donation (in Australia you can’t donate blood past the age of

28 81), Falkenmire and others hope people with similar antibodies in their blood will step up and

29 donate.


(Available at: https://edition.cnn.com/2018/05/11/health/james-harrison-blood-donor-retires-trnd/index.html – text especially adapted for this test).

Analyze the following sentences below about the excerpt “Most people get a gold watch when they retire”.


I. “Watch” is an uncountable noun.

II. “Gold” is an adjective.

III. If it was not preceded by “gold,” “watch” should be used with the article “an”.


Which ones are correct?

Alternativas
Q2431197 Inglês

Instruction: answer questions 31 to 40 based on the following text. The highlights throughout the text are cited in the questions.


He donated blood and saved the lives of 2.4 million babies


01 Most people get a gold watch when they retire. James Harrison deserves so much more than

02 that. Known as the “Man With the Golden Arm,” Harrison has donated blood nearly every week

03 for 60 years, and after all those donations, the 81-year-old Australian man “retired” Friday.

04 According to the Australian Red Cross Blood Service, he has helped save the lives of more than

05 2.4 million Australian babies because his blood has unique, disease-fighting antibodies.

06 Harrison’s antibodies have been used to develop an injection called Anti-D, which helps

07 fight against rhesus disease. This disease is a condition where a pregnant woman has rhesus-

08 negative blood (RhD negative) and the baby in her womb has rhesus-positive blood (RhD

09 positive), inherited from its father. If the mother has been sensitized to rhesus-positive blood,

10 usually during a previous pregnancy with a rhesus-positive baby, she may produce antibodies

11 that destroy the baby’s “foreign” blood cells. In the worst cases, it can result in brain damage,

12 or death, for the babies.

13 Harrison’s remarkable gift of giving started when he had major chest surgery when he was

14 just 14. Blood donations saved his life, so he pledged to become a blood donor. A few years

15 later, doctors discovered his blood contained the antibody which could be used to create Anti-D

16 injections, so he switched over to making blood plasma donations to help as many people as

17 possible. Doctors aren’t exactly sure why Harrison has this rare blood type, but they think it

18 might be from the transfusions he received when he was 14, after his surgery. He’s one of no

19 more than 50 people in Australia known to have the antibodies, according to the blood service.

20 “In Australia, up until about 1967, there were literally thousands of babies dying each year,

21 doctors didn’t know why, and it was awful.” Jemma Falkenmire, of the Australian Red Cross

22 Blood Service, told CNN. “Australia was one of the first countries to discover a blood donor with

23 this antibody, so it was quite revolutionary at the time.”

24 The blood service estimates Harrison saved more than two million lives, and for that, he is

25 considered a national hero in Australia. He’s won numerous awards for his generosity, including

26 the Medal of the Order of Australia, one of the country’s most prestigious honors. Now that

27 Harrison has given his last blood donation (in Australia you can’t donate blood past the age of

28 81), Falkenmire and others hope people with similar antibodies in their blood will step up and

29 donate.


(Available at: https://edition.cnn.com/2018/05/11/health/james-harrison-blood-donor-retires-trnd/index.html – text especially adapted for this test).

Mark the INCORRECT alternative about the text.

Alternativas
Q2431196 Inglês

Instruction: answer questions 31 to 40 based on the following text. The highlights throughout the text are cited in the questions.


He donated blood and saved the lives of 2.4 million babies


01 Most people get a gold watch when they retire. James Harrison deserves so much more than

02 that. Known as the “Man With the Golden Arm,” Harrison has donated blood nearly every week

03 for 60 years, and after all those donations, the 81-year-old Australian man “retired” Friday.

04 According to the Australian Red Cross Blood Service, he has helped save the lives of more than

05 2.4 million Australian babies because his blood has unique, disease-fighting antibodies.

06 Harrison’s antibodies have been used to develop an injection called Anti-D, which helps

07 fight against rhesus disease. This disease is a condition where a pregnant woman has rhesus-

08 negative blood (RhD negative) and the baby in her womb has rhesus-positive blood (RhD

09 positive), inherited from its father. If the mother has been sensitized to rhesus-positive blood,

10 usually during a previous pregnancy with a rhesus-positive baby, she may produce antibodies

11 that destroy the baby’s “foreign” blood cells. In the worst cases, it can result in brain damage,

12 or death, for the babies.

13 Harrison’s remarkable gift of giving started when he had major chest surgery when he was

14 just 14. Blood donations saved his life, so he pledged to become a blood donor. A few years

15 later, doctors discovered his blood contained the antibody which could be used to create Anti-D

16 injections, so he switched over to making blood plasma donations to help as many people as

17 possible. Doctors aren’t exactly sure why Harrison has this rare blood type, but they think it

18 might be from the transfusions he received when he was 14, after his surgery. He’s one of no

19 more than 50 people in Australia known to have the antibodies, according to the blood service.

20 “In Australia, up until about 1967, there were literally thousands of babies dying each year,

21 doctors didn’t know why, and it was awful.” Jemma Falkenmire, of the Australian Red Cross

22 Blood Service, told CNN. “Australia was one of the first countries to discover a blood donor with

23 this antibody, so it was quite revolutionary at the time.”

24 The blood service estimates Harrison saved more than two million lives, and for that, he is

25 considered a national hero in Australia. He’s won numerous awards for his generosity, including

26 the Medal of the Order of Australia, one of the country’s most prestigious honors. Now that

27 Harrison has given his last blood donation (in Australia you can’t donate blood past the age of

28 81), Falkenmire and others hope people with similar antibodies in their blood will step up and

29 donate.


(Available at: https://edition.cnn.com/2018/05/11/health/james-harrison-blood-donor-retires-trnd/index.html – text especially adapted for this test).

Which of the following questions is NOT answered by the text?

Alternativas
Q2431195 Inglês

Instruction: answer questions 31 to 40 based on the following text. The highlights throughout the text are cited in the questions.


He donated blood and saved the lives of 2.4 million babies


01 Most people get a gold watch when they retire. James Harrison deserves so much more than

02 that. Known as the “Man With the Golden Arm,” Harrison has donated blood nearly every week

03 for 60 years, and after all those donations, the 81-year-old Australian man “retired” Friday.

04 According to the Australian Red Cross Blood Service, he has helped save the lives of more than

05 2.4 million Australian babies because his blood has unique, disease-fighting antibodies.

06 Harrison’s antibodies have been used to develop an injection called Anti-D, which helps

07 fight against rhesus disease. This disease is a condition where a pregnant woman has rhesus-

08 negative blood (RhD negative) and the baby in her womb has rhesus-positive blood (RhD

09 positive), inherited from its father. If the mother has been sensitized to rhesus-positive blood,

10 usually during a previous pregnancy with a rhesus-positive baby, she may produce antibodies

11 that destroy the baby’s “foreign” blood cells. In the worst cases, it can result in brain damage,

12 or death, for the babies.

13 Harrison’s remarkable gift of giving started when he had major chest surgery when he was

14 just 14. Blood donations saved his life, so he pledged to become a blood donor. A few years

15 later, doctors discovered his blood contained the antibody which could be used to create Anti-D

16 injections, so he switched over to making blood plasma donations to help as many people as

17 possible. Doctors aren’t exactly sure why Harrison has this rare blood type, but they think it

18 might be from the transfusions he received when he was 14, after his surgery. He’s one of no

19 more than 50 people in Australia known to have the antibodies, according to the blood service.

20 “In Australia, up until about 1967, there were literally thousands of babies dying each year,

21 doctors didn’t know why, and it was awful.” Jemma Falkenmire, of the Australian Red Cross

22 Blood Service, told CNN. “Australia was one of the first countries to discover a blood donor with

23 this antibody, so it was quite revolutionary at the time.”

24 The blood service estimates Harrison saved more than two million lives, and for that, he is

25 considered a national hero in Australia. He’s won numerous awards for his generosity, including

26 the Medal of the Order of Australia, one of the country’s most prestigious honors. Now that

27 Harrison has given his last blood donation (in Australia you can’t donate blood past the age of

28 81), Falkenmire and others hope people with similar antibodies in their blood will step up and

29 donate.


(Available at: https://edition.cnn.com/2018/05/11/health/james-harrison-blood-donor-retires-trnd/index.html – text especially adapted for this test).

Analyze the following statements about the text and mark T, if true, or F, if false.


( ) Harrison survived rhesus disease, and that is why he has antibodies against it.

( ) Rhesus disease can cause the death of the pregnant mother.

( ) The first pregnancy can make a woman develop antibodies that will attack the baby’s cells in a second pregnancy.

( ) The Anti-D injection protects the baby when the mother has rhesus disease.


The correct order of filling the parentheses, from top to bottom, is:

Alternativas
Ano: 2023 Banca: FGV Órgão: Câmara dos Deputados Provas: FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IV - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IX - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área VII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área X | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIV - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XX - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XXII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área II - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área III - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área V - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XV - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVI - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIX - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVI - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVII + XVIII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XX - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área X - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XXI - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIV - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIX - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIV - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área X - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XXII - Prova Discursiva | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIX - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IX - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área VIII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área V - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área VII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área II - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área III - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIII - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XII - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área I - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IV - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) |
Q2430546 Inglês

Read Text II and answer the three questions that follow it.

Text II


June 15, 2023 - Debates over Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) efforts are currently thriving, including debates over the degree to which corporate diversity efforts are valuable, whether chief diversity officers can succeed, and whether corporate diversity commitments can produce lasting change.

Over the past year, at least a dozen U.S. state legislatures have proposed or passed laws targeting DEI efforts, including laws aimed at limiting DEI roles and efforts in businesses and higher education and laws eliminating DEI spending, trainings, and statements at public institutions. Moreover, with the U.S. Supreme Court poised to address affirmative action in two cases involving the consideration of race in higher education admissions this summer, debates in the U.S. regarding DEI initiatives are likely far from over.

At the same time, DEI-related legal requirements continue to grow in other jurisdictions, and with global financial institutions facing expanding environmental, social, and governance (ESG)- related trends and regulations in the EU and other jurisdictions, as well as global expectations regarding their role in ESG, including DEI-related corporate developments and initiatives, these matters are likely to continue to work their way into capital allocations and the costs of doing business, as well as into the expectations of certain stakeholders.

This widening gap between global expectations and regulation regarding DEI-related matters and the concerns of some constituents in the U.S. over the role of DEI in corporate decision-making is likely to continue growing for the foreseeable future, putting companies between the proverbial rock and hard place.

What these developments make clear is that corporate DEI efforts are, and likely have been for some time, riskier than many companies may initially appreciate. And the risks associated with DEI initiatives are only positioned to grow and expand as companies look to thread the DEI needle and make a broader and potentially more divergent set of stakeholders happy, or at least less annoyed, with their DEI-related commitments and initiatives. In this article, we discuss the top four legal risks that companies often fail to address in their DEI efforts.

[…]


(From https://www.reuters.com/legal/legalindustry/diversity-matters-four-scarylegal-risks-hiding-your-dei-program-2023-06-15/

Analyse the assertions below based on Text II.


I. Debates over DEI in the US have reached a successful closure.

II. ESG-related trends have had little effect over global financial institutions.

III. Regarding legal risks in DEI initiatives, companies still have some way to go.


Choose the correct answer

Alternativas
Ano: 2023 Banca: FGV Órgão: Câmara dos Deputados Provas: FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IV - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IX - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área VII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área X | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIV - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XX - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XXII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área II - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área III - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área V - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XV - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVI - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIX - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVI - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVII + XVIII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XX - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área X - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XXI - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIV - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIX - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIV - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área X - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XXII - Prova Discursiva | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIX - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IX - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área VIII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área V - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área VII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área II - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área III - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área I - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIII - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XII - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IV - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) |
Q2430542 Inglês

Read Text I and answer the seven questions that follow it.


Text I


‘It’s dangerous work’: new generation of Indigenous activists battle to save the Amazon


The medicine man flashed a mischievous grin as he dabbed his warriors’ eyeballs with a feather soaked in malagueta pepper and watched them grimace in pain. “They’re going into battle and this will protect them,” José Delfonso Pereira said as he advanced on his next target with a jam jar of his chilli potion.

“It hurts and it burns,” the Macuxi shaman admitted. “But it will help them see more clearly and stop them falling ill.”

It was a crisp August morning and a dozen members of an Indigenous self-defence team had assembled in the hillside village of Tabatinga to receive Pereira’s blessing before launching their latest mission into one of the Amazon’s most secluded corners, near Brazil’s border with Guyana and Venezuela.

Some of the men clutched bloodwood truncheons as they prepared to journey down the Maú River in search of illegal miners; others held bows and arrows adorned with the black feathers of curassow birds. Marco Antônio Silva Batista carried a drone.

“If I die, it will be for a good cause – ensuring our territory is preserved for future generations,” said the 20-year-old activistjournalist, whose ability to spy on environmental criminals from above has made him a key member of GPVTI, an Indigenous patrol group in the Brazilian state of Roraima.

Batista, who belongs to South America’s Macuxi people, is part of a new generation of Indigenous journalists helping chronicle an age-old battle against outside aggression. For centuries, non-Indigenous writers and reporters have flocked to the rainforest region to tell their version of that ancestral fight for survival. Now, a growing cohort of Indigenous communicators are telling their own stories, providing first-hand dispatches from some of the Amazon’s most inaccessible and under-reported corners.

“It’s dangerous work and we suffer a lot when we’re out in the field,” said Batista, one of about 26,000 inhabitants of Raposa Serra do Sol, Brazil’s second most populous Indigenous territory. “But it really gives me strength because I’m showing the reality of our lives to the world.” (…)


(Adapted from https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/sep/03/itsdangerous-work-new-generation-of-indigenous-activists-battle-to-save-the-amazon)

Pereira’s “next target” (1st paragraph) is

Alternativas
Ano: 2023 Banca: FGV Órgão: Câmara dos Deputados Provas: FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IV - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IX - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área VII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área X | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIV - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XX - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XXII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área II - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área III - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área V - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XV - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVI - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIX - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVI - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVII + XVIII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XX - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área X - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XXI - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIV - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIX - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIV - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área X - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XXII - Prova Discursiva | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIX - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IX - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área VIII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área V - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área VII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área II - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área III - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área I - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIII - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XII - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IV - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) |
Q2430541 Inglês

Read Text I and answer the seven questions that follow it.


Text I


‘It’s dangerous work’: new generation of Indigenous activists battle to save the Amazon


The medicine man flashed a mischievous grin as he dabbed his warriors’ eyeballs with a feather soaked in malagueta pepper and watched them grimace in pain. “They’re going into battle and this will protect them,” José Delfonso Pereira said as he advanced on his next target with a jam jar of his chilli potion.

“It hurts and it burns,” the Macuxi shaman admitted. “But it will help them see more clearly and stop them falling ill.”

It was a crisp August morning and a dozen members of an Indigenous self-defence team had assembled in the hillside village of Tabatinga to receive Pereira’s blessing before launching their latest mission into one of the Amazon’s most secluded corners, near Brazil’s border with Guyana and Venezuela.

Some of the men clutched bloodwood truncheons as they prepared to journey down the Maú River in search of illegal miners; others held bows and arrows adorned with the black feathers of curassow birds. Marco Antônio Silva Batista carried a drone.

“If I die, it will be for a good cause – ensuring our territory is preserved for future generations,” said the 20-year-old activistjournalist, whose ability to spy on environmental criminals from above has made him a key member of GPVTI, an Indigenous patrol group in the Brazilian state of Roraima.

Batista, who belongs to South America’s Macuxi people, is part of a new generation of Indigenous journalists helping chronicle an age-old battle against outside aggression. For centuries, non-Indigenous writers and reporters have flocked to the rainforest region to tell their version of that ancestral fight for survival. Now, a growing cohort of Indigenous communicators are telling their own stories, providing first-hand dispatches from some of the Amazon’s most inaccessible and under-reported corners.

“It’s dangerous work and we suffer a lot when we’re out in the field,” said Batista, one of about 26,000 inhabitants of Raposa Serra do Sol, Brazil’s second most populous Indigenous territory. “But it really gives me strength because I’m showing the reality of our lives to the world.” (…)


(Adapted from https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/sep/03/itsdangerous-work-new-generation-of-indigenous-activists-battle-to-save-the-amazon)

When the author informs that “The medicine man flashed a mischievous grin” (1st paragraph), he implies that the shaman

Alternativas
Ano: 2023 Banca: FGV Órgão: Câmara dos Deputados Provas: FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IV - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IX - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área VII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área X | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIV - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XX - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XXII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área II - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área III - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área V - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XV - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVII - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVI - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIX - Manhã | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVI - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XVII + XVIII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XX - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área X - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XXI - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIV - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIX - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIV - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área X - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XXII - Prova Discursiva | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIX - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IX - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área VIII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área V - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área VII - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área II - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área III - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área I - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XIII - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área XII - Prova Discursiva (tarde) | FGV - 2023 - Câmara dos Deputados - Consultor Legislativo - Área IV - Prova Discursiva (manhâ) |
Q2430540 Inglês

Read Text I and answer the seven questions that follow it.


Text I


‘It’s dangerous work’: new generation of Indigenous activists battle to save the Amazon


The medicine man flashed a mischievous grin as he dabbed his warriors’ eyeballs with a feather soaked in malagueta pepper and watched them grimace in pain. “They’re going into battle and this will protect them,” José Delfonso Pereira said as he advanced on his next target with a jam jar of his chilli potion.

“It hurts and it burns,” the Macuxi shaman admitted. “But it will help them see more clearly and stop them falling ill.”

It was a crisp August morning and a dozen members of an Indigenous self-defence team had assembled in the hillside village of Tabatinga to receive Pereira’s blessing before launching their latest mission into one of the Amazon’s most secluded corners, near Brazil’s border with Guyana and Venezuela.

Some of the men clutched bloodwood truncheons as they prepared to journey down the Maú River in search of illegal miners; others held bows and arrows adorned with the black feathers of curassow birds. Marco Antônio Silva Batista carried a drone.

“If I die, it will be for a good cause – ensuring our territory is preserved for future generations,” said the 20-year-old activistjournalist, whose ability to spy on environmental criminals from above has made him a key member of GPVTI, an Indigenous patrol group in the Brazilian state of Roraima.

Batista, who belongs to South America’s Macuxi people, is part of a new generation of Indigenous journalists helping chronicle an age-old battle against outside aggression. For centuries, non-Indigenous writers and reporters have flocked to the rainforest region to tell their version of that ancestral fight for survival. Now, a growing cohort of Indigenous communicators are telling their own stories, providing first-hand dispatches from some of the Amazon’s most inaccessible and under-reported corners.

“It’s dangerous work and we suffer a lot when we’re out in the field,” said Batista, one of about 26,000 inhabitants of Raposa Serra do Sol, Brazil’s second most populous Indigenous territory. “But it really gives me strength because I’m showing the reality of our lives to the world.” (…)


(Adapted from https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/sep/03/itsdangerous-work-new-generation-of-indigenous-activists-battle-to-save-the-amazon)

What drives the warriors mentioned in the text is their will to,

Alternativas
Q2430467 Inglês

Read the Text I and answer the five questions that follow it.


Text I


Correspondence


Human genome editing: potential seeds of conflict


Recently, The Lancet published an important declaration regarding the necessity of regulating and legislating for human genome editing. We agree with their opinions that the human genome editing technology and resulting research can have both positive and negative effects on human society. The use of genome editing for research and commercial purposes has sparked debates in both biological and political realms. However, most of them have mainly focused on the effects of human genome editing on the patients themselves, and little attention has been paid to their offspring.

Several films, such as Gattaca and Gundam SEED, have addressed the conflicts that arise from human genome editing. Such conflicts not only exist within the generation who have experienced editing but are also transmitted to their offspring. For example, in these films, the offspring of people without genome editing felt a sense of unfairness regarding the inferiority of their physical (or other non-edited domains) status, whereas the offspring of people with genome editing grew up in a biased, discriminated against, and ostracized environment. They could have lived in peace with a strong and well regulated government; however, when the tenuous grip of government weakens, jealousy and resentment can lead to ruins. Although these scenes still exist in films, they might become increasingly plausible in decades to come. Using the concept of preparedness, access, countermeasures, tools, and trust, we should prepare legitimate human genome editing, establish access to deal with imminent or potential discrimination, develop countermeasures and tools for prevention and resolution of conflict, and entrust future generations with the responsibility to use them wisely.

Bing-Yan Zeng, Ping-Tao Tseng, *Chih-Sung Liang


Adapted from: www.thelancet.com, vol. 401, June 24, 2023 athttps://www.thelancet.com/action/showPdf?pii=S0140-6736%2823%2901084-X

In the final sentence of their letter, the authors suggest what they hold to be a(n)

Alternativas
Q2430464 Inglês

Read the Text I and answer the five questions that follow it.


Text I


Correspondence


Human genome editing: potential seeds of conflict


Recently, The Lancet published an important declaration regarding the necessity of regulating and legislating for human genome editing. We agree with their opinions that the human genome editing technology and resulting research can have both positive and negative effects on human society. The use of genome editing for research and commercial purposes has sparked debates in both biological and political realms. However, most of them have mainly focused on the effects of human genome editing on the patients themselves, and little attention has been paid to their offspring.

Several films, such as Gattaca and Gundam SEED, have addressed the conflicts that arise from human genome editing. Such conflicts not only exist within the generation who have experienced editing but are also transmitted to their offspring. For example, in these films, the offspring of people without genome editing felt a sense of unfairness regarding the inferiority of their physical (or other non-edited domains) status, whereas the offspring of people with genome editing grew up in a biased, discriminated against, and ostracized environment. They could have lived in peace with a strong and well regulated government; however, when the tenuous grip of government weakens, jealousy and resentment can lead to ruins. Although these scenes still exist in films, they might become increasingly plausible in decades to come. Using the concept of preparedness, access, countermeasures, tools, and trust, we should prepare legitimate human genome editing, establish access to deal with imminent or potential discrimination, develop countermeasures and tools for prevention and resolution of conflict, and entrust future generations with the responsibility to use them wisely.

Bing-Yan Zeng, Ping-Tao Tseng, *Chih-Sung Liang


Adapted from: www.thelancet.com, vol. 401, June 24, 2023 athttps://www.thelancet.com/action/showPdf?pii=S0140-6736%2823%2901084-X

Based on the text, mark the statements below as true (T) or false (F).


( ) In principle, the authors back the basic tenets on human genome editing technology held earlier by the same journal.

( ) Human genome editing research has focused mostly on the progeny rather than on the patients.

( ) The settings depicted in the motion pictures mentioned may come about in the real world.


The statements are, respectively,

Alternativas
Q2426080 Inglês

O texto seguinte servirá de base para responder às questões de 1 a 4.


A doll to place your dreams on...


(1º§) "Someday I'm gonna be, exactly like you... till then... I'll make believe I'm you." So went the dulcet tones of Barbie's first ever TV advert in 1959. That year, what would come to be toy company Mattel's most significant and long-lasting creation, Barbie, arrived.

(2º§) She was the brainchild of Ruth Handler; the co-founder, along with her husband Eliot, of Mattel in 1945. According to one of two origin stories (the other involving an adult novelty doll called Bild Lilli, handed out at bachelor parties), Handler noticed her daughter Barbara playing with paper dolls and decided she wanted to give her a doll that was not a baby, but a woman she could aspire to. Barbie, named after her daughter, was born and she premiered at the annual Toy Fair in New York in March 1959. In the first year, 300,000 Barbie dolls were sold.

(3º§) She was 'petite' as the advert chimes, with all the latest clothes and accessories. Among these was, of course, a wedding dress. Her immediate MO was clearly as a stylish and sophisticated style maven, the kind of svelte, pretty woman young girls wanted to be − at least in 1959. Her first ever outfit − as exemplified in Gerwig's initial teaser trailer for the Barbie movie − was a black and white swimsuit, with white heels and white-rimmed sunglasses. Unsurprisingly, by 1961, she was 'going steady' with Ken (oddly named after the Handlers' son).


Courting controversy


(4º§) By the 1960s, Barbie was already attracting criticism for being a 'sex symbol'. To counteract this, the Handlers gave her a little sister, Skipper (originally a child and now sold as a teenager), and a best friend, Midge − who would go to have her own chequered history. Fashioned as a 'homelier' friend for Barbie (with red hair and freckles) Midge would disappear after 1967, returning in the 1980s along with a husband, kids and a 'Happy Family Line' of toys, which even included Pregnant Midge (with a detachable womb!). The line courted scandal from every angle − among which was outrage that Midge was pregnant without a wedding ring. Cannily, Gerwig has lined up Emerald Fennell to play Midge. Yes, Pregnant Midge.

(5º§) Though to many Barbie was too conventional − with her improbable proportions and origins as a doll who aspires to, essentially, marry Ken − to many she was too progressive. Indeed, as early as 1968, nine years after Barbie's invention, Mattel introduced their first Black doll, Christie, a friend of Barbie. Christie arrived at a fecund point in American politics, just as the Civil Rights Act of 1968 − enshrining the illegality of racial discrimination − was passed.

(6º§) It would not be until 1980, however, that Mattel would produce its first Black Barbie. She was designed by Kitty Black Perkins, who was then chief designer for Barbie. She bought her first Barbie doll aged 28, when interviewing for the position, when she was asked to create a whole new wardrobe for the doll. She was chief designer for more than 30 years and, in 1979, she was asked to design the first ever Black Barbie. When she arrived, she was wearing a red disco jumpsuit and came with the tagline: "She's Black! She's beautiful! She's dynamite!"


(adapted) https://www.harpersbazaar.com/uk/culture/entertainment/a44129282/

In response to criticism that Barbie was seen as a 'sex symbol,' what did the Handlers do to counteract this perception?

Alternativas
Q2426079 Inglês

O texto seguinte servirá de base para responder às questões de 1 a 4.


A doll to place your dreams on...


(1º§) "Someday I'm gonna be, exactly like you... till then... I'll make believe I'm you." So went the dulcet tones of Barbie's first ever TV advert in 1959. That year, what would come to be toy company Mattel's most significant and long-lasting creation, Barbie, arrived.

(2º§) She was the brainchild of Ruth Handler; the co-founder, along with her husband Eliot, of Mattel in 1945. According to one of two origin stories (the other involving an adult novelty doll called Bild Lilli, handed out at bachelor parties), Handler noticed her daughter Barbara playing with paper dolls and decided she wanted to give her a doll that was not a baby, but a woman she could aspire to. Barbie, named after her daughter, was born and she premiered at the annual Toy Fair in New York in March 1959. In the first year, 300,000 Barbie dolls were sold.

(3º§) She was 'petite' as the advert chimes, with all the latest clothes and accessories. Among these was, of course, a wedding dress. Her immediate MO was clearly as a stylish and sophisticated style maven, the kind of svelte, pretty woman young girls wanted to be − at least in 1959. Her first ever outfit − as exemplified in Gerwig's initial teaser trailer for the Barbie movie − was a black and white swimsuit, with white heels and white-rimmed sunglasses. Unsurprisingly, by 1961, she was 'going steady' with Ken (oddly named after the Handlers' son).


Courting controversy


(4º§) By the 1960s, Barbie was already attracting criticism for being a 'sex symbol'. To counteract this, the Handlers gave her a little sister, Skipper (originally a child and now sold as a teenager), and a best friend, Midge − who would go to have her own chequered history. Fashioned as a 'homelier' friend for Barbie (with red hair and freckles) Midge would disappear after 1967, returning in the 1980s along with a husband, kids and a 'Happy Family Line' of toys, which even included Pregnant Midge (with a detachable womb!). The line courted scandal from every angle − among which was outrage that Midge was pregnant without a wedding ring. Cannily, Gerwig has lined up Emerald Fennell to play Midge. Yes, Pregnant Midge.

(5º§) Though to many Barbie was too conventional − with her improbable proportions and origins as a doll who aspires to, essentially, marry Ken − to many she was too progressive. Indeed, as early as 1968, nine years after Barbie's invention, Mattel introduced their first Black doll, Christie, a friend of Barbie. Christie arrived at a fecund point in American politics, just as the Civil Rights Act of 1968 − enshrining the illegality of racial discrimination − was passed.

(6º§) It would not be until 1980, however, that Mattel would produce its first Black Barbie. She was designed by Kitty Black Perkins, who was then chief designer for Barbie. She bought her first Barbie doll aged 28, when interviewing for the position, when she was asked to create a whole new wardrobe for the doll. She was chief designer for more than 30 years and, in 1979, she was asked to design the first ever Black Barbie. When she arrived, she was wearing a red disco jumpsuit and came with the tagline: "She's Black! She's beautiful! She's dynamite!"


(adapted) https://www.harpersbazaar.com/uk/culture/entertainment/a44129282/

Who designed the first-ever Black Barbie?

Alternativas
Q2426078 Inglês

O texto seguinte servirá de base para responder às questões de 1 a 4.


A doll to place your dreams on...


(1º§) "Someday I'm gonna be, exactly like you... till then... I'll make believe I'm you." So went the dulcet tones of Barbie's first ever TV advert in 1959. That year, what would come to be toy company Mattel's most significant and long-lasting creation, Barbie, arrived.

(2º§) She was the brainchild of Ruth Handler; the co-founder, along with her husband Eliot, of Mattel in 1945. According to one of two origin stories (the other involving an adult novelty doll called Bild Lilli, handed out at bachelor parties), Handler noticed her daughter Barbara playing with paper dolls and decided she wanted to give her a doll that was not a baby, but a woman she could aspire to. Barbie, named after her daughter, was born and she premiered at the annual Toy Fair in New York in March 1959. In the first year, 300,000 Barbie dolls were sold.

(3º§) She was 'petite' as the advert chimes, with all the latest clothes and accessories. Among these was, of course, a wedding dress. Her immediate MO was clearly as a stylish and sophisticated style maven, the kind of svelte, pretty woman young girls wanted to be − at least in 1959. Her first ever outfit − as exemplified in Gerwig's initial teaser trailer for the Barbie movie − was a black and white swimsuit, with white heels and white-rimmed sunglasses. Unsurprisingly, by 1961, she was 'going steady' with Ken (oddly named after the Handlers' son).


Courting controversy


(4º§) By the 1960s, Barbie was already attracting criticism for being a 'sex symbol'. To counteract this, the Handlers gave her a little sister, Skipper (originally a child and now sold as a teenager), and a best friend, Midge − who would go to have her own chequered history. Fashioned as a 'homelier' friend for Barbie (with red hair and freckles) Midge would disappear after 1967, returning in the 1980s along with a husband, kids and a 'Happy Family Line' of toys, which even included Pregnant Midge (with a detachable womb!). The line courted scandal from every angle − among which was outrage that Midge was pregnant without a wedding ring. Cannily, Gerwig has lined up Emerald Fennell to play Midge. Yes, Pregnant Midge.

(5º§) Though to many Barbie was too conventional − with her improbable proportions and origins as a doll who aspires to, essentially, marry Ken − to many she was too progressive. Indeed, as early as 1968, nine years after Barbie's invention, Mattel introduced their first Black doll, Christie, a friend of Barbie. Christie arrived at a fecund point in American politics, just as the Civil Rights Act of 1968 − enshrining the illegality of racial discrimination − was passed.

(6º§) It would not be until 1980, however, that Mattel would produce its first Black Barbie. She was designed by Kitty Black Perkins, who was then chief designer for Barbie. She bought her first Barbie doll aged 28, when interviewing for the position, when she was asked to create a whole new wardrobe for the doll. She was chief designer for more than 30 years and, in 1979, she was asked to design the first ever Black Barbie. When she arrived, she was wearing a red disco jumpsuit and came with the tagline: "She's Black! She's beautiful! She's dynamite!"


(adapted) https://www.harpersbazaar.com/uk/culture/entertainment/a44129282/

What inspired Ruth Handler to create Barbie?

Alternativas
Respostas
4241: E
4242: E
4243: D
4244: E
4245: B
4246: D
4247: A
4248: B
4249: D
4250: A
4251: C
4252: C
4253: C
4254: E
4255: B
4256: C
4257: B
4258: C
4259: A
4260: C