Questões de Concurso Sobre inglês

Foram encontradas 25.289 questões

Q3763515 Inglês
The Currículo em Movimento do Distrito Federal establishes that English teaching in Elementary Education must go beyond the mechanistic acquisition of vocabulary and grammar, focusing instead on communicative competence, intercultural dialogue, and the development of socio‑emotional skills. The objectives include fostering learners’ ability to interpret, produce, and critically analyze texts in diverse modalities and contexts. In High School, within Linguagens e suas Tecnologias, English is conceived as a tool for global interaction, scientific‑literary engagement, and technological literacy. This curricular design emphasizes the integration of linguistic, cultural, and multimodal dimensions, ensuring that students not only master the code but also participate actively in contemporary society. Consequently, teachers are expected to align their didactic‑pedagogical organization with critical‑reflective practices that cultivate autonomy, citizenship, and ethical awareness.

About the text and based on the principles of the Currículo em Movimento do Distrito Federal for English in Elementary Education and for the area of Linguagens e suas Tecnologias in High School, judge the following items.
Teachers are expected to adopt uncritical, transmissive methodologies, minimizing the role of autonomy and ethical awareness.
Alternativas
Q3763514 Inglês
The Currículo em Movimento do Distrito Federal establishes that English teaching in Elementary Education must go beyond the mechanistic acquisition of vocabulary and grammar, focusing instead on communicative competence, intercultural dialogue, and the development of socio‑emotional skills. The objectives include fostering learners’ ability to interpret, produce, and critically analyze texts in diverse modalities and contexts. In High School, within Linguagens e suas Tecnologias, English is conceived as a tool for global interaction, scientific‑literary engagement, and technological literacy. This curricular design emphasizes the integration of linguistic, cultural, and multimodal dimensions, ensuring that students not only master the code but also participate actively in contemporary society. Consequently, teachers are expected to align their didactic‑pedagogical organization with critical‑reflective practices that cultivate autonomy, citizenship, and ethical awareness.

About the text and based on the principles of the Currículo em Movimento do Distrito Federal for English in Elementary Education and for the area of Linguagens e suas Tecnologias in High School, judge the following items.
The curricular approach highlights the integration of linguistic, cultural, and multimodal dimensions, aiming at active social participation.
Alternativas
Q3763513 Inglês
The Currículo em Movimento do Distrito Federal establishes that English teaching in Elementary Education must go beyond the mechanistic acquisition of vocabulary and grammar, focusing instead on communicative competence, intercultural dialogue, and the development of socio‑emotional skills. The objectives include fostering learners’ ability to interpret, produce, and critically analyze texts in diverse modalities and contexts. In High School, within Linguagens e suas Tecnologias, English is conceived as a tool for global interaction, scientific‑literary engagement, and technological literacy. This curricular design emphasizes the integration of linguistic, cultural, and multimodal dimensions, ensuring that students not only master the code but also participate actively in contemporary society. Consequently, teachers are expected to align their didactic‑pedagogical organization with critical‑reflective practices that cultivate autonomy, citizenship, and ethical awareness.

About the text and based on the principles of the Currículo em Movimento do Distrito Federal for English in Elementary Education and for the area of Linguagens e suas Tecnologias in High School, judge the following items.
 In High School, English is framed exclusively as a subject of literary study, with no reference to technological or global dimensions.
Alternativas
Q3763512 Inglês
The Currículo em Movimento do Distrito Federal establishes that English teaching in Elementary Education must go beyond the mechanistic acquisition of vocabulary and grammar, focusing instead on communicative competence, intercultural dialogue, and the development of socio‑emotional skills. The objectives include fostering learners’ ability to interpret, produce, and critically analyze texts in diverse modalities and contexts. In High School, within Linguagens e suas Tecnologias, English is conceived as a tool for global interaction, scientific‑literary engagement, and technological literacy. This curricular design emphasizes the integration of linguistic, cultural, and multimodal dimensions, ensuring that students not only master the code but also participate actively in contemporary society. Consequently, teachers are expected to align their didactic‑pedagogical organization with critical‑reflective practices that cultivate autonomy, citizenship, and ethical awareness.

About the text and based on the principles of the Currículo em Movimento do Distrito Federal for English in Elementary Education and for the area of Linguagens e suas Tecnologias in High School, judge the following items.
The objectives for English teaching include developing learners’ critical capacity to interpret and produce texts in multiple modalities.
Alternativas
Q3763511 Inglês
The Currículo em Movimento do Distrito Federal establishes that English teaching in Elementary Education must go beyond the mechanistic acquisition of vocabulary and grammar, focusing instead on communicative competence, intercultural dialogue, and the development of socio‑emotional skills. The objectives include fostering learners’ ability to interpret, produce, and critically analyze texts in diverse modalities and contexts. In High School, within Linguagens e suas Tecnologias, English is conceived as a tool for global interaction, scientific‑literary engagement, and technological literacy. This curricular design emphasizes the integration of linguistic, cultural, and multimodal dimensions, ensuring that students not only master the code but also participate actively in contemporary society. Consequently, teachers are expected to align their didactic‑pedagogical organization with critical‑reflective practices that cultivate autonomy, citizenship, and ethical awareness.

About the text and based on the principles of the Currículo em Movimento do Distrito Federal for English in Elementary Education and for the area of Linguagens e suas Tecnologias in High School, judge the following items.
In Elementary Education, the curriculum restricts English teaching to lexical and grammatical memorization, disregarding communicative competence.
Alternativas
Q3763510 Inglês
In contemporary education, the didactic‑pedagogical organization of English language teaching requires a shift from traditional transmission models to integrative, learner‑centered methodologies. Globalization has accentuated the demand for communicative competence, intercultural awareness, and critical thinking. Thus, English teaching cannot be reduced to grammatical instruction; it must be articulated with broader socio‑educational goals. Integrative approaches, such as CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning), highlight the synergy between linguistic development and knowledge construction, linking classroom practices to real‑world issues. In this sense, teaching English contributes not only to linguistic proficiency but also to the formation of active citizenship, as learners engage with ethical, cultural, and civic dimensions of language use. The challenge for teachers lies in balancing methodological rigor with flexibility, ensuring that language instruction addresses global demands while respecting local contexts.

About the text, based on methodological approaches to English language teaching, didactic‑pedagogical organization and the implications for citizenship formation in a globalized context, judge the following items.
Teachers must combine methodological rigor with contextual flexibility, ensuring that English instruction adapts to both global demands and local realities
Alternativas
Q3763509 Inglês
In contemporary education, the didactic‑pedagogical organization of English language teaching requires a shift from traditional transmission models to integrative, learner‑centered methodologies. Globalization has accentuated the demand for communicative competence, intercultural awareness, and critical thinking. Thus, English teaching cannot be reduced to grammatical instruction; it must be articulated with broader socio‑educational goals. Integrative approaches, such as CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning), highlight the synergy between linguistic development and knowledge construction, linking classroom practices to real‑world issues. In this sense, teaching English contributes not only to linguistic proficiency but also to the formation of active citizenship, as learners engage with ethical, cultural, and civic dimensions of language use. The challenge for teachers lies in balancing methodological rigor with flexibility, ensuring that language instruction addresses global demands while respecting local contexts.

About the text, based on methodological approaches to English language teaching, didactic‑pedagogical organization and the implications for citizenship formation in a globalized context, judge the following items.
The role of English teaching in citizenship formation is considered irrelevant in the text, which emphasizes only professional communication.  
Alternativas
Q3763508 Inglês
In contemporary education, the didactic‑pedagogical organization of English language teaching requires a shift from traditional transmission models to integrative, learner‑centered methodologies. Globalization has accentuated the demand for communicative competence, intercultural awareness, and critical thinking. Thus, English teaching cannot be reduced to grammatical instruction; it must be articulated with broader socio‑educational goals. Integrative approaches, such as CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning), highlight the synergy between linguistic development and knowledge construction, linking classroom practices to real‑world issues. In this sense, teaching English contributes not only to linguistic proficiency but also to the formation of active citizenship, as learners engage with ethical, cultural, and civic dimensions of language use. The challenge for teachers lies in balancing methodological rigor with flexibility, ensuring that language instruction addresses global demands while respecting local contexts.

About the text, based on methodological approaches to English language teaching, didactic‑pedagogical organization and the implications for citizenship formation in a globalized context, judge the following items.
CLIL methodology is presented as an example of integrating language learning with content knowledge, reinforcing the link between linguistic competence and knowledge construction.
Alternativas
Q3763507 Inglês
In contemporary education, the didactic‑pedagogical organization of English language teaching requires a shift from traditional transmission models to integrative, learner‑centered methodologies. Globalization has accentuated the demand for communicative competence, intercultural awareness, and critical thinking. Thus, English teaching cannot be reduced to grammatical instruction; it must be articulated with broader socio‑educational goals. Integrative approaches, such as CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning), highlight the synergy between linguistic development and knowledge construction, linking classroom practices to real‑world issues. In this sense, teaching English contributes not only to linguistic proficiency but also to the formation of active citizenship, as learners engage with ethical, cultural, and civic dimensions of language use. The challenge for teachers lies in balancing methodological rigor with flexibility, ensuring that language instruction addresses global demands while respecting local contexts.

About the text, based on methodological approaches to English language teaching, didactic‑pedagogical organization and the implications for citizenship formation in a globalized context, judge the following items.
Globalization requires English teaching to foster intercultural awareness and critical thinking, extending beyond purely linguistic goals.
Alternativas
Q3763506 Inglês
In contemporary education, the didactic‑pedagogical organization of English language teaching requires a shift from traditional transmission models to integrative, learner‑centered methodologies. Globalization has accentuated the demand for communicative competence, intercultural awareness, and critical thinking. Thus, English teaching cannot be reduced to grammatical instruction; it must be articulated with broader socio‑educational goals. Integrative approaches, such as CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning), highlight the synergy between linguistic development and knowledge construction, linking classroom practices to real‑world issues. In this sense, teaching English contributes not only to linguistic proficiency but also to the formation of active citizenship, as learners engage with ethical, cultural, and civic dimensions of language use. The challenge for teachers lies in balancing methodological rigor with flexibility, ensuring that language instruction addresses global demands while respecting local contexts.

About the text, based on methodological approaches to English language teaching, didactic‑pedagogical organization and the implications for citizenship formation in a globalized context, judge the following items.
The text suggests that English teaching should remain focused exclusively on grammar and vocabulary, since these are the only stable components of language learning.
Alternativas
Q3763505 Inglês
During a professional development workshop, experienced English teachers debated the unpredictability of the relationship between English orthography and phonology. The discussion centered around words such as psychology, though, enough, colonel, and rhythm. These lexical items exemplify phenomena such as silent consonants, irregular vowel representations, and the lack of a transparent grapheme‑to‑phoneme correspondence. For instance, psychology demonstrates the silent from its Greek origin; though and enough illustrate the multiple realizations of the grapheme ; colonel reveals a deep etymological shift, where spelling no longer mirrors sound; and rhythm exemplifies the complexity of syllabic nuclei, since it has only one vowel letter but more than one syllable. The pedagogical challenge, therefore, lies in enabling learners to understand these irregularities explicitly rather than relying solely on exposure, which often results in fossilized errors.

About the text and based on the phonetic/phonological aspects of the English vocalic and consonantal systems, judge the following items.
From a pedagogical perspective, explicit teaching of such irregularities is unnecessary, as learners acquire them naturally through exposure. 
Alternativas
Q3763504 Inglês
During a professional development workshop, experienced English teachers debated the unpredictability of the relationship between English orthography and phonology. The discussion centered around words such as psychology, though, enough, colonel, and rhythm. These lexical items exemplify phenomena such as silent consonants, irregular vowel representations, and the lack of a transparent grapheme‑to‑phoneme correspondence. For instance, psychology demonstrates the silent from its Greek origin; though and enough illustrate the multiple realizations of the grapheme ; colonel reveals a deep etymological shift, where spelling no longer mirrors sound; and rhythm exemplifies the complexity of syllabic nuclei, since it has only one vowel letter but more than one syllable. The pedagogical challenge, therefore, lies in enabling learners to understand these irregularities explicitly rather than relying solely on exposure, which often results in fossilized errors.

About the text and based on the phonetic/phonological aspects of the English vocalic and consonantal systems, judge the following items.
The word rhythm demonstrates that vowel letters and vowel sounds correspond one‑to‑one in English.
Alternativas
Q3763503 Inglês
During a professional development workshop, experienced English teachers debated the unpredictability of the relationship between English orthography and phonology. The discussion centered around words such as psychology, though, enough, colonel, and rhythm. These lexical items exemplify phenomena such as silent consonants, irregular vowel representations, and the lack of a transparent grapheme‑to‑phoneme correspondence. For instance, psychology demonstrates the silent from its Greek origin; though and enough illustrate the multiple realizations of the grapheme ; colonel reveals a deep etymological shift, where spelling no longer mirrors sound; and rhythm exemplifies the complexity of syllabic nuclei, since it has only one vowel letter but more than one syllable. The pedagogical challenge, therefore, lies in enabling learners to understand these irregularities explicitly rather than relying solely on exposure, which often results in fossilized errors.

About the text and based on the phonetic/phonological aspects of the English vocalic and consonantal systems, judge the following items.
In colonel, the letters are not pronounced, and the actual phonological realization is /ˈkɜrnəl/.
Alternativas
Q3763502 Inglês
During a professional development workshop, experienced English teachers debated the unpredictability of the relationship between English orthography and phonology. The discussion centered around words such as psychology, though, enough, colonel, and rhythm. These lexical items exemplify phenomena such as silent consonants, irregular vowel representations, and the lack of a transparent grapheme‑to‑phoneme correspondence. For instance, psychology demonstrates the silent from its Greek origin; though and enough illustrate the multiple realizations of the grapheme ; colonel reveals a deep etymological shift, where spelling no longer mirrors sound; and rhythm exemplifies the complexity of syllabic nuclei, since it has only one vowel letter but more than one syllable. The pedagogical challenge, therefore, lies in enabling learners to understand these irregularities explicitly rather than relying solely on exposure, which often results in fossilized errors.

About the text and based on the phonetic/phonological aspects of the English vocalic and consonantal systems, judge the following items.
The grapheme exemplifies phonological variability, since in though it represents /oʊ/ and in enough it represents /ʌf/.
Alternativas
Q3763501 Inglês
During a professional development workshop, experienced English teachers debated the unpredictability of the relationship between English orthography and phonology. The discussion centered around words such as psychology, though, enough, colonel, and rhythm. These lexical items exemplify phenomena such as silent consonants, irregular vowel representations, and the lack of a transparent grapheme‑to‑phoneme correspondence. For instance, psychology demonstrates the silent from its Greek origin; though and enough illustrate the multiple realizations of the grapheme ; colonel reveals a deep etymological shift, where spelling no longer mirrors sound; and rhythm exemplifies the complexity of syllabic nuclei, since it has only one vowel letter but more than one syllable. The pedagogical challenge, therefore, lies in enabling learners to understand these irregularities explicitly rather than relying solely on exposure, which often results in fossilized errors.

About the text and based on the phonetic/phonological aspects of the English vocalic and consonantal systems, judge the following items.
In psychology, the is phonetically realized as /p/, which maintains consistency with its etymology. 
Alternativas
Q3763500 Inglês
During a postgraduate seminar on English morphology, a student submitted the following sentence in an essay: “The unprecedented misinterpretation of the government’s counterproductive policies illustrates how overgeneralizations can destabilize socio‑political frameworks.”. The trainee teachers disagreed on how to analyze the morphological complexity of the highlighted words and their pedagogical treatment in advanced EFL contexts.

About the situation above and considering the morphological aspects of the English language, judge the following items.
The word overgeneralizations combines prefixation (over‑), suffixation (‑ation and plural ‑s), exemplifying a chain of both derivational and inflectional morphology.
Alternativas
Q3763499 Inglês
During a postgraduate seminar on English morphology, a student submitted the following sentence in an essay: “The unprecedented misinterpretation of the government’s counterproductive policies illustrates how overgeneralizations can destabilize socio‑political frameworks.”. The trainee teachers disagreed on how to analyze the morphological complexity of the highlighted words and their pedagogical treatment in advanced EFL contexts.

About the situation above and considering the morphological aspects of the English language, judge the following items.
Inflectional morphemes alter grammatical features without changing lexical categories.
Alternativas
Q3763498 Inglês
During a postgraduate seminar on English morphology, a student submitted the following sentence in an essay: “The unprecedented misinterpretation of the government’s counterproductive policies illustrates how overgeneralizations can destabilize socio‑political frameworks.”. The trainee teachers disagreed on how to analyze the morphological complexity of the highlighted words and their pedagogical treatment in advanced EFL contexts.

About the situation above and considering the morphological aspects of the English language, judge the following items.
The word counterproductive exemplifies compounding rather than prefixation.
Alternativas
Q3763497 Inglês
During a postgraduate seminar on English morphology, a student submitted the following sentence in an essay: “The unprecedented misinterpretation of the government’s counterproductive policies illustrates how overgeneralizations can destabilize socio‑political frameworks.”. The trainee teachers disagreed on how to analyze the morphological complexity of the highlighted words and their pedagogical treatment in advanced EFL contexts.

About the situation above and considering the morphological aspects of the English language, judge the following items.
The word misinterpretation illustrates two derivational processes: prefixation (mis‑) and suffixation (‑ation).
Alternativas
Q3763496 Inglês
During a postgraduate seminar on English morphology, a student submitted the following sentence in an essay: “The unprecedented misinterpretation of the government’s counterproductive policies illustrates how overgeneralizations can destabilize socio‑political frameworks.”. The trainee teachers disagreed on how to analyze the morphological complexity of the highlighted words and their pedagogical treatment in advanced EFL contexts.

About the situation above and considering the morphological aspects of the English language, judge the following items.
The word unprecedented is formed through prefixation (un‑), root (precede), and the suffix ‑ed, showing both derivational and inflectional morphology
Alternativas
Respostas
2641: E
2642: C
2643: E
2644: C
2645: E
2646: C
2647: E
2648: C
2649: C
2650: E
2651: E
2652: E
2653: C
2654: C
2655: E
2656: C
2657: C
2658: E
2659: C
2660: C