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Q2708744 Auditoria

De acordo com a norma internacional 1100 do IIA, a área de auditoria interna deve ter:

Alternativas
Q2708701 Odontologia

Os instrumentais perfurocortantes como: ampolas, vidros, laminas de bisturis e agulhas, após a sua utilização em procedimento clínico odontológico devem ser acondicionados em

Alternativas
Q2708699 Odontologia

A numeração dos Fórceps utilizados para exodontias dos pré-molares inferiores e pré-molares superiores, é, respectivamente:

Alternativas
Q2708697 Odontologia

O risco de cárie é reduzido pela exposição frequente a baixos níveis de flúor, contido, por exemplo, na água fluoretada e cremes dentais. Além do dentifrícios fluoretados, outras formas de flúor tópico estão indicadas para o indivíduo com alto risco de cárie. Assinale a alternativa que apresenta a sequência CORRETA do protocolo clínico para a aplicação tópica de flúor (ATF), em uma criança de 6 anos que demonstra alto risco e alta atividade de cárie:

Alternativas
Q2708695 Odontologia

Os Cimentos de Ionômero de vidro apresentam características benéficas, como potencial adesivo, coeficiente próximo ao do dente, biocompatibilidade com o tecido pulpar e efeito cariostático, pela liberação de flúor, que atributos esses que os credenciam como uma das mais promissoras descobertas no setor preventivo e restaurador na Dentística. Indique a única situação dentre as abaixo descritas, em que é permitido o uso do Cimento de Ionômero de Vidro:

Alternativas
Q2708694 Odontologia

Quanto a nomenclatura dos dentes, as faces que mantêm contato com os dentes da mesma arcada, estando voltadas, respectivamente, para o plano sagital mediano e para a porção posterior dos arcos dentais, são assim denominadas:

Alternativas
Q2708693 Odontologia

O ser humano apresenta duas dentições, a decídua e a definitiva; esta última conhecida como “Dentes Permanentes”. Assinale dentre as características abaixo relacionadas, a única que NÃO se aplica ao segundo tipo de dentição.

Alternativas
Q2708692 Odontologia

Indique, dentre os materiais e instrumentais abaixo relacionados, os que serão utilizados na realização de uma restauração MésioOcluso- Distal (MOD) NO elemento dentário 35, utilizando a Resina Composta Nanohíbrida, sendo selecionada a cor A3 para dentina e A2 para esmalte.

Alternativas
Q2708691 Odontologia

Indique qual, dentre os procedimentos clínico odontológico, abaixo mencionados, utiliza os seguintes instrumentais e materiais: lâmina e cabo de bisturi, pinça hemostática, tesoura, porta agulha, seringa carpule, agulha gengival, fio de sutura, gaze estéril.

Alternativas
Q2708689 Odontologia

Um paciente jovem, com 17 anos, chega à Unidade Básica de Saúde, sentindo dor nos primeiro e segundo molares inferiores direitos. Durante o exame clínico, o Cirurgião-Dentista diagnostica presença de cárie nos respectivos elementos dentários. Na ficha clínica do paciente, encontra-se o Odontograma, no qual serão marcadas as lesões nas faces correspondentes. No caso citado, os elementos dentários, que deverão ser marcados em seu prontuário como cariados são respectivamente:

Alternativas
Q2708688 Odontologia

Para que o exercício profissional do Auxiliar e Técnico em Saúde Bucal ocorra legalmente, estes deverão estar inscritos no Conselho Regional de Odontologia, havendo, assim, a garantia de respaldo legal para a prática de suas atribuições e competências. São algumas das competências da função Técnico em Saúde Bucal:


I- Preparar modelos em gesso.

II- Registrar dados e participar da análise das informações relacionadas ao controle administrativo em saúde bucal.

III- Realizar o acolhimento do paciente nos serviços de saúde bucal.

IV- Aplicar medidas de biossegurança no armazenamento, transporte, manuseio e descarte de produtos e resíduos odontológicos.

V- Prestar assistência, direta ou indiretamente, ao paciente, sem a indispensável supervisão do cirurgião-dentista.


É CORRETO o que se afirma apenas em:

Alternativas
Q2701770 Inglês

TEXT V- Text for questions 38, 39and 40.

Strategic behavior in digital reading in English

as a second/foreign language: a literature review

(Juliana do Amaral, Marília Camponogara Torres, Lêda Maria Braga Tomitch).


  1. “[...] It is essential that teachers acknowledge the fact that reading hypertexts is a more cognitively
  2. demanding process which requires skills such as navigating through hyperlinks and constructing meaning
  3. from multiple sources. Besides, teachers need to develop students’ awareness when reading digital texts
  4. by showing them that the strategies employed in this space might be borrowed from traditional forms of
  5. reading, but, many times, should be selected from a pool of specific strategies that are unique to the digital
  6. environment. In this way, fostering the students’ metacognition in reading in a second/foreign language
  7. is essential to improve their competence as readers of both printed and digital texts.” (p. 143)

Besides, teachers need to develop students' awareness when reading digital texts by showing them that the strategies employed in this space might be borrowed from traditional forms of reading [...]”.The word besides indicates

Alternativas
Q2701769 Inglês

TEXT V- Text for questions 38, 39and 40.

Strategic behavior in digital reading in English

as a second/foreign language: a literature review

(Juliana do Amaral, Marília Camponogara Torres, Lêda Maria Braga Tomitch).


  1. “[...] It is essential that teachers acknowledge the fact that reading hypertexts is a more cognitively
  2. demanding process which requires skills such as navigating through hyperlinks and constructing meaning
  3. from multiple sources. Besides, teachers need to develop students’ awareness when reading digital texts
  4. by showing them that the strategies employed in this space might be borrowed from traditional forms of
  5. reading, but, many times, should be selected from a pool of specific strategies that are unique to the digital
  6. environment. In this way, fostering the students’ metacognition in reading in a second/foreign language
  7. is essential to improve their competence as readers of both printed and digital texts.” (p. 143)

The words reading (line 1), demanding (line 2), navigating (line 2), meaning (line 3) and reading (line 7) are, respectively

Alternativas
Q2701768 Inglês

TEXT V- Text for questions 38, 39and 40.

Strategic behavior in digital reading in English

as a second/foreign language: a literature review

(Juliana do Amaral, Marília Camponogara Torres, Lêda Maria Braga Tomitch).


  1. “[...] It is essential that teachers acknowledge the fact that reading hypertexts is a more cognitively
  2. demanding process which requires skills such as navigating through hyperlinks and constructing meaning
  3. from multiple sources. Besides, teachers need to develop students’ awareness when reading digital texts
  4. by showing them that the strategies employed in this space might be borrowed from traditional forms of
  5. reading, but, many times, should be selected from a pool of specific strategies that are unique to the digital
  6. environment. In this way, fostering the students’ metacognition in reading in a second/foreign language
  7. is essential to improve their competence as readers of both printed and digital texts.” (p. 143)

Choose the correct information according to the text.

Alternativas
Q2701763 Inglês

TEXT II

Affordances and limitations of technology: Voices from EFL teachers and learners.

(Mohammad Amiryousefi)


Abstract

  1. With the developments of new technologies appearing very quickly, the attention has been focused more on
  2. technology than learning. English centers and institutes have mostly been busy accommodating new programs
  3. and technologies and hence have not spent enough time to evaluate the CALL (Computer Assisted Language
  4. Learning) programs and technologies employed to find their affordances and limitations. The present study
  5. was an attempt to study the perceptions and evaluation of the Iranian EFL learners and teachers about CALL.
  6. To this end, 240 students and teachers of two big institutes in Iran where CALL is used in their English
  7. learning program participated in the study. The required data were collected through a mixed-method design.
  8. The results of data analysis showed that CALL can enhance language learning and English listening, reading,
  9. and writing skills. It can also increase students' motivation and interest in learning and their exposure to
  10. language. However, it cannot improve speaking skill well. It also causes technology addiction, lacks good
  11. standards and an interactive nature necessary for the development of communicative proficiency, and may
  12. give the confidence to the teachers that everything is prepared by CALL courseware designers and hence they
  13. may come unprepared. The present study argues that the mere focus on technological support is not adequate,
  14. and a pedagogical understanding of language teachers’ and learners’ new roles and identities in CALL
  15. environment should be developed.


Keywords:

Computer Assisted Language Learning; evaluation; perception; language learning;

language skills


(Source: Journal of English Language Teaching and Learning. Article 2, Volume 9, Issue 19, Winter and Spring 2017, page 1-24. Available at: https://elt.tabrizu.ac.ir/article_6252.html . Accessed on April 20th, 2019)


Answer questions 30 to 33 according to TEXT II.

The phrase “To this end” (lines 6 and 7) refers to

Alternativas
Q2701762 Inglês

TEXT II

Affordances and limitations of technology: Voices from EFL teachers and learners.

(Mohammad Amiryousefi)


Abstract

  1. With the developments of new technologies appearing very quickly, the attention has been focused more on
  2. technology than learning. English centers and institutes have mostly been busy accommodating new programs
  3. and technologies and hence have not spent enough time to evaluate the CALL (Computer Assisted Language
  4. Learning) programs and technologies employed to find their affordances and limitations. The present study
  5. was an attempt to study the perceptions and evaluation of the Iranian EFL learners and teachers about CALL.
  6. To this end, 240 students and teachers of two big institutes in Iran where CALL is used in their English
  7. learning program participated in the study. The required data were collected through a mixed-method design.
  8. The results of data analysis showed that CALL can enhance language learning and English listening, reading,
  9. and writing skills. It can also increase students' motivation and interest in learning and their exposure to
  10. language. However, it cannot improve speaking skill well. It also causes technology addiction, lacks good
  11. standards and an interactive nature necessary for the development of communicative proficiency, and may
  12. give the confidence to the teachers that everything is prepared by CALL courseware designers and hence they
  13. may come unprepared. The present study argues that the mere focus on technological support is not adequate,
  14. and a pedagogical understanding of language teachers’ and learners’ new roles and identities in CALL
  15. environment should be developed.


Keywords:

Computer Assisted Language Learning; evaluation; perception; language learning;

language skills


(Source: Journal of English Language Teaching and Learning. Article 2, Volume 9, Issue 19, Winter and Spring 2017, page 1-24. Available at: https://elt.tabrizu.ac.ir/article_6252.html . Accessed on April 20th, 2019)


Answer questions 30 to 33 according to TEXT II.

The sentence “…the attention has been focused more on technology than learning” (lines 1 and 2) is an example of:

Alternativas
Q2701761 Inglês

TEXT II

Affordances and limitations of technology: Voices from EFL teachers and learners.

(Mohammad Amiryousefi)


Abstract

  1. With the developments of new technologies appearing very quickly, the attention has been focused more on
  2. technology than learning. English centers and institutes have mostly been busy accommodating new programs
  3. and technologies and hence have not spent enough time to evaluate the CALL (Computer Assisted Language
  4. Learning) programs and technologies employed to find their affordances and limitations. The present study
  5. was an attempt to study the perceptions and evaluation of the Iranian EFL learners and teachers about CALL.
  6. To this end, 240 students and teachers of two big institutes in Iran where CALL is used in their English
  7. learning program participated in the study. The required data were collected through a mixed-method design.
  8. The results of data analysis showed that CALL can enhance language learning and English listening, reading,
  9. and writing skills. It can also increase students' motivation and interest in learning and their exposure to
  10. language. However, it cannot improve speaking skill well. It also causes technology addiction, lacks good
  11. standards and an interactive nature necessary for the development of communicative proficiency, and may
  12. give the confidence to the teachers that everything is prepared by CALL courseware designers and hence they
  13. may come unprepared. The present study argues that the mere focus on technological support is not adequate,
  14. and a pedagogical understanding of language teachers’ and learners’ new roles and identities in CALL
  15. environment should be developed.


Keywords:

Computer Assisted Language Learning; evaluation; perception; language learning;

language skills


(Source: Journal of English Language Teaching and Learning. Article 2, Volume 9, Issue 19, Winter and Spring 2017, page 1-24. Available at: https://elt.tabrizu.ac.ir/article_6252.html . Accessed on April 20th, 2019)


Answer questions 30 to 33 according to TEXT II.

The research results indicate that

Alternativas
Q2701760 Inglês

TEXT II

Affordances and limitations of technology: Voices from EFL teachers and learners.

(Mohammad Amiryousefi)


Abstract

  1. With the developments of new technologies appearing very quickly, the attention has been focused more on
  2. technology than learning. English centers and institutes have mostly been busy accommodating new programs
  3. and technologies and hence have not spent enough time to evaluate the CALL (Computer Assisted Language
  4. Learning) programs and technologies employed to find their affordances and limitations. The present study
  5. was an attempt to study the perceptions and evaluation of the Iranian EFL learners and teachers about CALL.
  6. To this end, 240 students and teachers of two big institutes in Iran where CALL is used in their English
  7. learning program participated in the study. The required data were collected through a mixed-method design.
  8. The results of data analysis showed that CALL can enhance language learning and English listening, reading,
  9. and writing skills. It can also increase students' motivation and interest in learning and their exposure to
  10. language. However, it cannot improve speaking skill well. It also causes technology addiction, lacks good
  11. standards and an interactive nature necessary for the development of communicative proficiency, and may
  12. give the confidence to the teachers that everything is prepared by CALL courseware designers and hence they
  13. may come unprepared. The present study argues that the mere focus on technological support is not adequate,
  14. and a pedagogical understanding of language teachers’ and learners’ new roles and identities in CALL
  15. environment should be developed.


Keywords:

Computer Assisted Language Learning; evaluation; perception; language learning;

language skills


(Source: Journal of English Language Teaching and Learning. Article 2, Volume 9, Issue 19, Winter and Spring 2017, page 1-24. Available at: https://elt.tabrizu.ac.ir/article_6252.html . Accessed on April 20th, 2019)


Answer questions 30 to 33 according to TEXT II.

Considering the abstract of the paper written by Mohammad Amiryousefi, which of the following statements is CORRECT?

Alternativas
Q2701759 Inglês

TEXT I

The teaching of English as a foreign language in the context of Brazilian regular schools: a retrospective and prospective view of policies and practices.

(Ricardo Luiz Teixeira de Almeida).


(…) A brief overview of the recent history of ELT in Brazilian regular schools

During the 1970s, the so-called audiolingual method, based on behaviorist and structuralist assumptions, was still considered the only scientific way of teaching a foreign language. Its emphasis on the oral skills and on the exhaustive repetition of structural exercises seemed to work well in the contexts of private language institutes. Those contexts were characterized by the gathering of small numbers of highly motivated students per class, a weekly time-table superior in the number of hours to the one adopted in regular schools, and plenty of audiovisual resources. Questionable in itself, both because of its results (which in time were revealed to be less efficient than believed, especially in terms of fluency) and its theoretical assumptions, the method ended up being adopted by regular schools due to its positive reputation at the time. The failure of the methodology in this context would soon become evident, generating extreme frustration both amongst teachers and students.

From the 1980s on, with the spread of ideas connected to the so-called communicative approach and the growth of English for Specific Purposes (ESP), the community of researchers and teachers interested in the context of regular schools started reviewing the assumptions and logic of English Language Teaching (ELT). Recognizing that each and every school discipline needs to justify its presence in the curriculum socially and educationally, this movement identified the skill of reading as the most relevant one for the students attending the majority of Brazilian regular schools. This understanding was achieved by considering not only the possibility of real use outside school, but also the role this approach could play in the achievement of other educational goals, such as the improvement of student's reading abilities in Portuguese as a mother tongue (MOITA LOPES, 1996)*. This movement reached its climax with the publication of the Brazilian National Curricular Parameters (PCN) for the teaching of foreign languages at basic education level by the end of the 1990s. The document recommended the focus on the teaching of reading within a view of language as discourse. However, it did not close the door on the teaching of any other skill, as long as the context made it possible and relevant.

It is important at this point to clarify a few things about the emergence of this educational policy. First of all, it was not formulated apart from the community of teachers and researchers and then imposed upon them. On the contrary, great names in Brazilian Applied Linguistics, such as Luiz Paulo da Moita Lopes and Maria Antonieta Celani among others, were involved in the formulation of the Parameters. Even more important than that, a lot of teachers, individually or collectively, with or without supervision, were already trying the focus on reading as an alternative to the failure of previous practices before the Parameters were elaborated. Two well-known examples are those from Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo during the late 1980s and early 1990s. In São Paulo, The Catholic University (PUCSP) became a national center for foreign language teacher education, through the development of a Brazilian ESP project focusing on reading (CELANI, 2005)**. In Rio de Janeiro, a discussion conducted by the city educational authorities and the teachers in public schools (concerning the contents and methodology of each school discipline), during the administrations of Saturnino Braga and Marcelo Alencar, led to the proposition that the focus on reading for foreign language teaching reflected the will of most teachers who participated in the discussion.

Another important characteristic of the Parameters that should not be overlooked is their emphasis on teacher's autonomy. This emphasis can be seen clearly in the fact that no content or method is imposed upon the teachers. What one can find are suggestions and relevant information for teachers to make their own decisions, taking into consideration the context within which they work. In other words, the Parameters do not force any teacher to limit their focus on the teaching of reading, if they believe they can go further than that.

In spite of all these positive points, since their publication, it is possible to identify a strong resistance to the focus on reading on the part of many teachers. The reasons for this resistance will be discussed in the following sections of this paper. […] (p.333-334)


*MOITA LOPES, Luiz Paulo da. Oficina de Lingüística Aplicada: a natureza social e educacional dos processos de ensino / aprendizagem de línguas. Campinas: Mercado de Letras, 1996.

**CELANI, M. A. Introduction. In: CELANI, M. A. et al. ESP in Brazil: 25 years of evolution and reflection. Campinas-SP: Mercado de Letras, São Paulo: Educ, 2005. p. 13-26.

(Adapted from: Revista Brasileira de Linguística Aplicada. vol.12. nº.2. Belo Horizonte. Apr./June 2012, p. 331-348. Available at: http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1984-63982012000200006 Accessed on April 15th, 2019)


Answer questions 26 to 29 according to TEXT I.

In spite of all these positive points, since their publication, it is possible to identify a strong resistance to the focus on reading on the part of many teachers.” The expression in spite of can be substituted by

Alternativas
Q2701758 Inglês

TEXT I

The teaching of English as a foreign language in the context of Brazilian regular schools: a retrospective and prospective view of policies and practices.

(Ricardo Luiz Teixeira de Almeida).


(…) A brief overview of the recent history of ELT in Brazilian regular schools

During the 1970s, the so-called audiolingual method, based on behaviorist and structuralist assumptions, was still considered the only scientific way of teaching a foreign language. Its emphasis on the oral skills and on the exhaustive repetition of structural exercises seemed to work well in the contexts of private language institutes. Those contexts were characterized by the gathering of small numbers of highly motivated students per class, a weekly time-table superior in the number of hours to the one adopted in regular schools, and plenty of audiovisual resources. Questionable in itself, both because of its results (which in time were revealed to be less efficient than believed, especially in terms of fluency) and its theoretical assumptions, the method ended up being adopted by regular schools due to its positive reputation at the time. The failure of the methodology in this context would soon become evident, generating extreme frustration both amongst teachers and students.

From the 1980s on, with the spread of ideas connected to the so-called communicative approach and the growth of English for Specific Purposes (ESP), the community of researchers and teachers interested in the context of regular schools started reviewing the assumptions and logic of English Language Teaching (ELT). Recognizing that each and every school discipline needs to justify its presence in the curriculum socially and educationally, this movement identified the skill of reading as the most relevant one for the students attending the majority of Brazilian regular schools. This understanding was achieved by considering not only the possibility of real use outside school, but also the role this approach could play in the achievement of other educational goals, such as the improvement of student's reading abilities in Portuguese as a mother tongue (MOITA LOPES, 1996)*. This movement reached its climax with the publication of the Brazilian National Curricular Parameters (PCN) for the teaching of foreign languages at basic education level by the end of the 1990s. The document recommended the focus on the teaching of reading within a view of language as discourse. However, it did not close the door on the teaching of any other skill, as long as the context made it possible and relevant.

It is important at this point to clarify a few things about the emergence of this educational policy. First of all, it was not formulated apart from the community of teachers and researchers and then imposed upon them. On the contrary, great names in Brazilian Applied Linguistics, such as Luiz Paulo da Moita Lopes and Maria Antonieta Celani among others, were involved in the formulation of the Parameters. Even more important than that, a lot of teachers, individually or collectively, with or without supervision, were already trying the focus on reading as an alternative to the failure of previous practices before the Parameters were elaborated. Two well-known examples are those from Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo during the late 1980s and early 1990s. In São Paulo, The Catholic University (PUCSP) became a national center for foreign language teacher education, through the development of a Brazilian ESP project focusing on reading (CELANI, 2005)**. In Rio de Janeiro, a discussion conducted by the city educational authorities and the teachers in public schools (concerning the contents and methodology of each school discipline), during the administrations of Saturnino Braga and Marcelo Alencar, led to the proposition that the focus on reading for foreign language teaching reflected the will of most teachers who participated in the discussion.

Another important characteristic of the Parameters that should not be overlooked is their emphasis on teacher's autonomy. This emphasis can be seen clearly in the fact that no content or method is imposed upon the teachers. What one can find are suggestions and relevant information for teachers to make their own decisions, taking into consideration the context within which they work. In other words, the Parameters do not force any teacher to limit their focus on the teaching of reading, if they believe they can go further than that.

In spite of all these positive points, since their publication, it is possible to identify a strong resistance to the focus on reading on the part of many teachers. The reasons for this resistance will be discussed in the following sections of this paper. […] (p.333-334)


*MOITA LOPES, Luiz Paulo da. Oficina de Lingüística Aplicada: a natureza social e educacional dos processos de ensino / aprendizagem de línguas. Campinas: Mercado de Letras, 1996.

**CELANI, M. A. Introduction. In: CELANI, M. A. et al. ESP in Brazil: 25 years of evolution and reflection. Campinas-SP: Mercado de Letras, São Paulo: Educ, 2005. p. 13-26.

(Adapted from: Revista Brasileira de Linguística Aplicada. vol.12. nº.2. Belo Horizonte. Apr./June 2012, p. 331-348. Available at: http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1984-63982012000200006 Accessed on April 15th, 2019)


Answer questions 26 to 29 according to TEXT I.

“[...] both because of its results (which in time were revealed to be less efficient than believed, especially in terms of fluency) and its theoretical assumptions [...]”. The word which

Alternativas
Respostas
13021: C
13022: B
13023: A
13024: A
13025: C
13026: E
13027: D
13028: B
13029: E
13030: B
13031: D
13032: C
13033: D
13034: A
13035: D
13036: E
13037: C
13038: D
13039: A
13040: B