Questões de Concurso Público IF-MT 2020 para Professor do Ensino Básico, Técnico e Tecnológico - Português e Inglês

Foram encontradas 7 questões

Q1703915 Inglês
After Reading Hutauruk's extract (2015) about selecting vocabulary in ESP, choose the correct answer.

 Selecting vocabulary.

   The initial step in teaching ESP vocabulary is to determine which words and special terms in fact to teach. Gairns and Redman (pag.59) emphasize especially cultural reasons and the principles of need and level. Authors of teaching materials and teachers should take into account also the criteria of learnability and teachability. According to Harmer (pag.154), one of the most common principles of vocabulary selection is to teach at first concrete words and gradually abstract words. Words like chair, table, sofa and wardrobe are easily presented and explained, because students can see or imagine the real things which the words represent. On the contrary, abstract words like density, qualifications, safety are more difficult to explain. There is a number of words that are connected with the idea of furniture (chair, table, sofa and wardrobe). Words that have this kind of thematic relationship are said to belong to the same lexical field. The texts of practical part also contain the lexical field of tool-related words that partly overlap with furniture words (hammer, screwdriver and saw) as well as terminology connected with trees (hardwood and softwood). After selection words for teaching purpose it is also indispensable to decide what to teach about each naming unit. According to Harmer (pag.158) and Thornbury (pag.15), knowledge of a word involves knowing its: Meaning - meanings in context, sense of relation (synonyms/antonyms), Form - spelling and pronunciation, affixes, parts of speech, Grammar - plurals, countability, past simple/participle forms, Usage - collocations and appropriate register. (pag.20)

Hutauruk, Bertaria Sohnata. TEACHING MODULE for ENGLISH FOR SPECIFIC PURPOSES . Pematangsiantar, 2015.
Hutauruk has based her discussion about selecting vocabulary in ESP on Harmer (1991), Gairns and Redman ( 1986) and Thornbury (2002). According to her,
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Q1703916 Inglês

Read the text and choose the correct answer.


 English learners and the four skills


When it comes to English language skills, reading is the most frequent activity - among those that already study and those that intend to, 76% read frequently. Many however, report difficulties with conversation and listening - even among those that have already studied or are studying English. The respondents' selfassessments show that the greatest difference between those that have studied or are currently studying English and those that intend to in the future is the skill of 'listening'. Those intending to study English considered this the area that they are least proficient in. The perception that their speaking ability is insufficient led the participants to cite speaking (50% of respondents) and listening (37% of respondents) among the skills that are most important to develop in a course. This is perceived to be more important than grammar. The preferred methods of teaching tend to be those that stimulate conversation; respondents prefer classes in English that "force" the development of the students' abilities. Respondents tended to think that this conversation should be stimulated before going in-depth into language and grammar rules. To them, the best way of practicing this is discussing current affairs directly relevant to their professional and personal lives. The reduced importance placed on writing and reading relative to speaking is also attributable to the availability of tools for written communication.


Frequency of use of English skill 



BRITISH COUNCIL. Learning English in Brazil: Understanding the aims and expectations of the Brazilian emerging middle classes. 1 st Edition, São Paulo. 2014 (p.22)

According to the text, Brazilian students
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Q1703920 Inglês
After reading Dirgeyasa's dialogue about genre-based approach, choose the alternative that it is not true. [...] Then recently, genre is also used in linguistics study. In linguistic study, genre becomes a kind language object to study. As a matter of fact, the study of genre in linguistics literacy is based on Systemic Functional Linguistic-SFL (Halliday, 1978; Swales, 1990; Hyland, 2003). Then, Christie dan Martin (2000) adds that linguistic functional becomes a basic and fundamental reference in the framework of the usage of the language in term of genre. So what is genre in terms of the language and linguistics? Martin (1999) states that genre is communication activity having and orienting goal. Then, Swales (1990) simply defines genre as a communication event in which the members have a set of communication goal. By referring two statements above, it can be said that genre is a process of communication which has a certain goal (goal oriented) for its members in a certain event of communication due to certain social context. Genre is a matter of communication event by social context. Consequently, the different social context then, tends to lead to different genre. [...] In addition, Swales (1990) further argues that: A class of communication events, the members of which share some ethnographical communication, but typically need further validation set of communicative purposes. The purposes are recognized by the expert members of the parent discourse community, and thereby constitute the rationale for the genre. This rationale shapes the schematic structure of the discourse and influences and constraints choice of the content and style. Communicative purpose is both a privileged criterion and one that operate to keep the scope of a genre as here conceived narrowly focused on comparable rhetorical action. In addition to purpose, exemplars of a genre exhibit various patterns of similarities in terms of structure, style, content and intended audiences..The genre name inherited and produced by discourse communities and imported by others constitute valuable.
What Swales has stated is seemingly clear that genre has a number of characteristic and features such as a) genre has a particular communication event, b) genre has a specific goal (goal oriented), c) genre is different and various in accordance to its typical features, d) each genre has a matter of limitation and rules including content, physical form, and shape, and e) every genre belongs to a certain discourse community. In line with discourse community, (Widdoson, 2007) adds that genre is shaped or existing due to the existing discourse community. It is a fact that different discourse community has different genre. Talking about discourse community and genre in connection to the discourse community, Swales (1990), as cited by (Ohoiwutun, 1996), clarifies that characteristics of discourse community in terms of the usage of language in social context is a) a certain discourse community has certain communication goals approved, b) the discourse community communicate within its members, c) a certain discourse community use a certain pattern of communication for its members, d) the discourse community tends to have more than one types of genre to communicate , and e) the discourse community, at last gains a number specific register. (p.45)
Dirgeyasa, I Wy. Genre-Based Approach: What and How to Teach and to Learn Writing. English Language Teaching; Vol. 9, No. 9; 2016
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Q1703921 Inglês

After reading the abstract bellow, choose the INCORRECT alternative:


Abstract: This paper reports the experience of developing teaching materials for public school teachers and students in southern Brazil in a project funded by the Education Department of Paraná State. The materials were intended as resources to be used by teachers according to their needs and those of their local communities, rather than as a textbook per se. The theory underlying this project is based on critical literacy and the idea that language is discourse, i.e. embedded in cultural and ideological values which determine its meaning and establish power relations among texts, among readers and among texts and their readers - Freirean "readers of the wor(l)d". Student-readers are, in this sense, co-constructors of meanings and responsible for making sense of reality. We expect students and teachers who use the materials we designed to become more aware of their possibilities as agents and this way we intend to foster a sense of active citizenship.

Key-word: critical literacy, citizenship, English teaching, public schools.

JORDÃO, Clarissa Menezes & FOGAÇA, Francisco Carlos. CRITICAL LITERACY IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE CLASSROOM. D.E.L.T.A., 28:1,2012 (69-84).


According to the abstract, this research was based on critical literacy that understands language as a discourse.

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Q1703927 Inglês

Read the text below in order to answer the question.

 

Chapter 3

CYBER-SCHOOLING AND TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE

Multiliteracies for new times

Carmen Luke

Introduction: technological innovation and dissemination


   In the last few years, talk about the information superhighway has saturated the media, the marketplace, and the public imagination. Social critics and commentators tell us we are in the midst of a technological and information revolution which will change for ever the way we communicate and conduct our everyday affairs. But what is the information revolution? How do the new technologies impact on our lives now and what might these changes mean for the future? What might all this mean for education, for teachers and students, for teaching and learning?

   My aim in this chapter is to provide a guided tour of a range of issues currently being raised about new information technologies (IT) and computer mediation communications (CMC), in relation to schooling and literacy. What is interesting in current debates is that researchers and social commentators are looking at much broader and more long-term social and cultural consequences of the impact of CMC. Even among educators, concerns are not confined exclusively to pedagogical and curriculum issues. It seems that questions about the significant and permanent social changes seeping into every crevice of our everyday work and private lives are on everyone's mind. Many of the issues that are being raised today, and which I will sketch out here, deal with abstract notions about the virtual and 'real'; about time and space; about 'body-less' interactions and comunities of learners; about global access, global culture, and so forth. But despite what appears to be a highly abstract debate, it nonetheless has concrete implications for schooling as we know it and all the traditional industrial model precepts and practices developed within that model. And yet the radical technological changes we now hear about in the media - most of which are framed in either a technophobic 'crisis' or else protechnology 'panacea' rhetoric - have been with us for quite some time.

   Of all the innovations in communications technologies over the past two decades, the video cassette recorder (VCR), computer, and now the global network of the Internet have had the most profound effect on home entertainment, education, and workplace practice.

[...]

   Today, the Internet is generating equally profound changes in the way we communicate, and how we access, produce, and distribute information and knowledge. Yet the Internet too is generating virulent responses from the public and social critics about its 'anarchic' nature: the inability to control it, to censor it, to manage and limit it. The Internet gets a lot of bad press particularly in relation to that age-old concern over various forms of pornography, privacy and sexual harassment, issues concerning 'electronic stalking', and questions of ownership, monopoly, and unequal access. By the same token, the huge educational (and entrepreneurial) potential of the Internet - popularised as the information superhighway - often gets lauded to the point of blind faith.

   Literacy requirements have changed and will continue to change as new technologies come on the marketplace and quickly blend into our everyday private and work lives.

[...] 



Multiliteracies

   What today appear as hybrid and frontier media forms will be commonplace in the near future, and will generate new text-based social repertoires, communication styles, and symbolic systems for accessing and participating in new knowledge and cultural configurations. Consider, for instance, that just to get into any basic computer program requires facility with both print literacy and any number of symbolic languages so that we know where to click in order to move through menued choices. Already we take that kind of literacy for granted.
   Much has been written on the theory and practice of critical literacy [...] However, scholarship on critical print-text and media literacy has barely taken the emergent digital domain of hypertextuality into consideration (Bigum and Green 1993). At the classroom level as well, 'teaching students about new technologies in their social and cultural work and leisure contexts has not been a high priority in curriculum development' (Kenway 1995). Nonetheless, the basic principles of a critical literacy are as applicable to computer-mediated communication and hypertextuality as they are to traditional print and mass-media texts.
   [...]
  The Multiliteracies of digital electronic 'texts' are based on notions of hybridity and intertextuality.
   [...]

(LUKE, Carmen. Cyber-schooling and technological change: multiliteracies for new times. In: COPE, Bill; KALANTZIS, Mary (Eds.). Multiliteracies: literacy learning and the design of social futures. New York: Routledge, 2000, p. 69-73).
Mark A (in agreement with) or D (in disagreement with) in the statements below according to the text above.
( ) Technological changes have a profound impact on education and on our everyday lives. ( ) Multiliteracy is a concept profoundly linked to technological changes. ( ) The Internet has changed the way we conceive the reading of a text. ( ) In terms of critical literacy, the basic principles of hypertextuality are different from print texts.
The CORRECT sequence is
Alternativas
Respostas
1: A
2: D
3: E
4: D
5: D