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Q1721774 Inglês

Choose the alternative with the suitable linking word:


____________ the bad weather we had to postpone our travel plans to the beach.

Alternativas
Q1721773 Inglês
In view of the sentence: “We regret that we visited that city”, choose the most appropriate alternative that express regret about the past:
Alternativas
Q1721772 Inglês
Considering the following sentence, choose the phrasal verb that has the equivalent meaning to what is indicated between parentheses:
The students have been ____________ (To Laze) all the time in class and now complain about their grades.
Alternativas
Q1721771 Inglês
Select the correct two forms of the verb 'To Forsake’ according to the order: Past simple - Past Participle.
Alternativas
Q1721770 Inglês

Read carefully the following fragment, then answer the question


Ebony and ivory

Ebony and ivory

Live together in perfect harmony

Side by side on my piano keyboard

Oh Lord, why don't we?

We all know that people are the same where ever you go

There is good and bad in everyone

And we learn to live, we learn to give each other

What we need to survive together alive

[...]

Ebony and ivory - song by Paul McCartney, 1982.

The excerpt: “There is good and bad in everyone” has its meaning correctly represented in the alternative:
Alternativas
Q1721769 Inglês

Read carefully the following fragment, then answer the question


Ebony and ivory

Ebony and ivory

Live together in perfect harmony

Side by side on my piano keyboard

Oh Lord, why don't we?

We all know that people are the same where ever you go

There is good and bad in everyone

And we learn to live, we learn to give each other

What we need to survive together alive

[...]

Ebony and ivory - song by Paul McCartney, 1982.

What analogy can be made considering the message of the song? Choose the CORRECT alternative:
Alternativas
Q1721768 Inglês
Answer the question according to the text bellow

THE CREATIVE BRAIN IS WIRED DIFFERENTLY

Scientists studying brain scans of people who were asked to come up with inventive uses for everyday objects found a specific pattern of connectivity that correlated with the most creative responses. Researchers were then able to use that pattern to predict how creative other people's responses would be based on their connections in this network. The study is described in a January 15 (2018) paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"What this shows is that the creative brain is wired differently," said Roger Beaty, a Post-Doctoral Fellow in Psychology and the first author of the study. "People who are more creative can simultaneously engage brain networks that don't typically work together. We also used predictive modeling to show we could predict, with some degree of accuracy, how creative people's ideas were (based on brain scans) that had already been published." Beaty and colleagues reanalyzed brain data from previous studies and found that, by simply measuring the strength of connections in these peoples' brain networks, they could estimate how original their ideas would be.

While the data showed that regions across the brain were involved in creative thought, Beaty said the evidence pointed to three subnetworks -- the default mode network, the salience network and the executive control network -- that appear to play key roles in creative thought.

The default mode network, he said, is involved in memory and mental simulation, so the theory is that it plays an important role in processes like mindwandering, imagination, and spontaneous thinking.

"In terms of creativity, we think that's important for brainstorming," Beaty said. "But you're not always going to stumble onto the most creative idea that way, because you might be drawn to something unoriginal from memory, so that's when these other networks come online."

The salience network, he said, detects important information, both in the environment and internally. When it comes to creativity, researchers believe it may be responsible for sorting through the ideas that emerge from the default mode network.

Lastly, Beaty said, the executive control network works to help people keep their focus on useful ideas while discarding those that aren't working.

"It's the synchrony between these systems that seems to be important for creativity," Beaty said. "People who think more flexibly and come up with more creative ideas are better able to engage these networks that don't typically work together and bring these systems online."

To identify the brain network involved in creativity, Beaty and colleagues recruited a total of 163 volunteers, and used functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI) technology to scan their brains as they tried to conceive of creative ideas for everyday objects, like a brick or a knife or a rope.

The team then trained "raters" to review the responses from participants and evaluate how creative their ideas were.

"Creativity is typically defined as the ability to come up with new and useful ideas," Beaty said. "We correlated the connectivity strength in this network while they were thinking creatively with the quality of their responses."

Based on the results of that test, Beaty and colleagues developed a predictive model and tested against brain scan data collected for earlier studies on creativity.

"We used already-published data. we found that based on how strong the connections are in this network, we could guess pretty accurately how creative you're going to be on a task," Beaty said.

Ultimately, Beaty said he hopes the study dispels some myths about creativity and where it comes from.

"One thing I hope this study does is dispel the myth of left versus right brain in creative thinking," he said. "This is a whole-brain endeavor."

It's also not clear that this can't be modified with some kind of training. "It's not something where you have it or you don't," he added. "Creativity is complex, and we're only scratching the surface here, so there's much more work that's needed."

Adapted from: Harvard University. Roger E. Beaty, Yoed N. Kenett, Alexander P. Christensen, Monica D. Rosenberg, Mathias Benedek, Qunlin Chen, Andreas Fink, Jiang Qiu, Thomas R. Kwapil, Michael J. Kane, Paul J. Silvia, 2018, accessed in February 2020.
As we read in the text "Creativity is typically defined as the ability to come up with new and useful ideas”, in the same way when we say someone is reliable, we meant to say:
Alternativas
Q1721766 Inglês
Answer the question according to the text bellow

THE CREATIVE BRAIN IS WIRED DIFFERENTLY

Scientists studying brain scans of people who were asked to come up with inventive uses for everyday objects found a specific pattern of connectivity that correlated with the most creative responses. Researchers were then able to use that pattern to predict how creative other people's responses would be based on their connections in this network. The study is described in a January 15 (2018) paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"What this shows is that the creative brain is wired differently," said Roger Beaty, a Post-Doctoral Fellow in Psychology and the first author of the study. "People who are more creative can simultaneously engage brain networks that don't typically work together. We also used predictive modeling to show we could predict, with some degree of accuracy, how creative people's ideas were (based on brain scans) that had already been published." Beaty and colleagues reanalyzed brain data from previous studies and found that, by simply measuring the strength of connections in these peoples' brain networks, they could estimate how original their ideas would be.

While the data showed that regions across the brain were involved in creative thought, Beaty said the evidence pointed to three subnetworks -- the default mode network, the salience network and the executive control network -- that appear to play key roles in creative thought.

The default mode network, he said, is involved in memory and mental simulation, so the theory is that it plays an important role in processes like mindwandering, imagination, and spontaneous thinking.

"In terms of creativity, we think that's important for brainstorming," Beaty said. "But you're not always going to stumble onto the most creative idea that way, because you might be drawn to something unoriginal from memory, so that's when these other networks come online."

The salience network, he said, detects important information, both in the environment and internally. When it comes to creativity, researchers believe it may be responsible for sorting through the ideas that emerge from the default mode network.

Lastly, Beaty said, the executive control network works to help people keep their focus on useful ideas while discarding those that aren't working.

"It's the synchrony between these systems that seems to be important for creativity," Beaty said. "People who think more flexibly and come up with more creative ideas are better able to engage these networks that don't typically work together and bring these systems online."

To identify the brain network involved in creativity, Beaty and colleagues recruited a total of 163 volunteers, and used functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI) technology to scan their brains as they tried to conceive of creative ideas for everyday objects, like a brick or a knife or a rope.

The team then trained "raters" to review the responses from participants and evaluate how creative their ideas were.

"Creativity is typically defined as the ability to come up with new and useful ideas," Beaty said. "We correlated the connectivity strength in this network while they were thinking creatively with the quality of their responses."

Based on the results of that test, Beaty and colleagues developed a predictive model and tested against brain scan data collected for earlier studies on creativity.

"We used already-published data. we found that based on how strong the connections are in this network, we could guess pretty accurately how creative you're going to be on a task," Beaty said.

Ultimately, Beaty said he hopes the study dispels some myths about creativity and where it comes from.

"One thing I hope this study does is dispel the myth of left versus right brain in creative thinking," he said. "This is a whole-brain endeavor."

It's also not clear that this can't be modified with some kind of training. "It's not something where you have it or you don't," he added. "Creativity is complex, and we're only scratching the surface here, so there's much more work that's needed."

Adapted from: Harvard University. Roger E. Beaty, Yoed N. Kenett, Alexander P. Christensen, Monica D. Rosenberg, Mathias Benedek, Qunlin Chen, Andreas Fink, Jiang Qiu, Thomas R. Kwapil, Michael J. Kane, Paul J. Silvia, 2018, accessed in February 2020.

Based on the text, determine which statements are TRUE (T) or FALSE (F).


( )The creative brain showed nonspecific connections.

( ) By measuring the strength of connections in the volunteers' brain networks, the researchers could estimate how creative their ideas would be.

( ) Brainstorming means “group discussion to produce ideas or solve problems”.

( ) The study demonstrated that creativity is simple matter and that only predisposed people can develop a creative mind.

Alternativas
Q1721765 Inglês
Answer the question according to the text bellow

THE CREATIVE BRAIN IS WIRED DIFFERENTLY

Scientists studying brain scans of people who were asked to come up with inventive uses for everyday objects found a specific pattern of connectivity that correlated with the most creative responses. Researchers were then able to use that pattern to predict how creative other people's responses would be based on their connections in this network. The study is described in a January 15 (2018) paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"What this shows is that the creative brain is wired differently," said Roger Beaty, a Post-Doctoral Fellow in Psychology and the first author of the study. "People who are more creative can simultaneously engage brain networks that don't typically work together. We also used predictive modeling to show we could predict, with some degree of accuracy, how creative people's ideas were (based on brain scans) that had already been published." Beaty and colleagues reanalyzed brain data from previous studies and found that, by simply measuring the strength of connections in these peoples' brain networks, they could estimate how original their ideas would be.

While the data showed that regions across the brain were involved in creative thought, Beaty said the evidence pointed to three subnetworks -- the default mode network, the salience network and the executive control network -- that appear to play key roles in creative thought.

The default mode network, he said, is involved in memory and mental simulation, so the theory is that it plays an important role in processes like mindwandering, imagination, and spontaneous thinking.

"In terms of creativity, we think that's important for brainstorming," Beaty said. "But you're not always going to stumble onto the most creative idea that way, because you might be drawn to something unoriginal from memory, so that's when these other networks come online."

The salience network, he said, detects important information, both in the environment and internally. When it comes to creativity, researchers believe it may be responsible for sorting through the ideas that emerge from the default mode network.

Lastly, Beaty said, the executive control network works to help people keep their focus on useful ideas while discarding those that aren't working.

"It's the synchrony between these systems that seems to be important for creativity," Beaty said. "People who think more flexibly and come up with more creative ideas are better able to engage these networks that don't typically work together and bring these systems online."

To identify the brain network involved in creativity, Beaty and colleagues recruited a total of 163 volunteers, and used functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI) technology to scan their brains as they tried to conceive of creative ideas for everyday objects, like a brick or a knife or a rope.

The team then trained "raters" to review the responses from participants and evaluate how creative their ideas were.

"Creativity is typically defined as the ability to come up with new and useful ideas," Beaty said. "We correlated the connectivity strength in this network while they were thinking creatively with the quality of their responses."

Based on the results of that test, Beaty and colleagues developed a predictive model and tested against brain scan data collected for earlier studies on creativity.

"We used already-published data. we found that based on how strong the connections are in this network, we could guess pretty accurately how creative you're going to be on a task," Beaty said.

Ultimately, Beaty said he hopes the study dispels some myths about creativity and where it comes from.

"One thing I hope this study does is dispel the myth of left versus right brain in creative thinking," he said. "This is a whole-brain endeavor."

It's also not clear that this can't be modified with some kind of training. "It's not something where you have it or you don't," he added. "Creativity is complex, and we're only scratching the surface here, so there's much more work that's needed."

Adapted from: Harvard University. Roger E. Beaty, Yoed N. Kenett, Alexander P. Christensen, Monica D. Rosenberg, Mathias Benedek, Qunlin Chen, Andreas Fink, Jiang Qiu, Thomas R. Kwapil, Michael J. Kane, Paul J. Silvia, 2018, accessed in February 2020.
It is possible to comprehend from the text that the main finding of the research was:
Alternativas
Q1719217 Direito da Criança e do Adolescente - Estatuto da Criança e do Adolescente (ECA) - Lei nº 8.069 de 1990
Segundo o Estatuto da Criança e do Adolescente, em seu art. 4º, “é dever da família, da comunidade, da sociedade em geral e do poder público assegurar, com absoluta prioridade, a efetivação dos direitos referentes a”:
Assinale a alternativa que apresenta completamente os referidos direitos.
Alternativas
Q1719216 Estatuto da Pessoa com Deficiência - Lei nº 13.146 de 2015
Segundo o art. 46, do Decreto no 3.298, de 20 de dezembro de 1999, que dispõe sobre a Política Nacional para a Integração da Pessoa Portadora de Deficiência, os órgãos e as entidades da Administração Pública Federal direta e indireta responsáveis pela cultura, pelo desporto, pelo turismo e pelo lazer dispensarão tratamento prioritário e adequado aos assuntos objeto referido Decreto, com vista a viabilizar, sem prejuízo de outras, as seguintes medidas, entre outras:
I. Incentivar a prática desportiva formal e formal como direito de cada um e o lazer como forma de promoção social. II. Estimular meios que facilitem o exercício de atividades desportivas entre a pessoa portadora de deficiência e suas entidades representativas. III. Assegurar a acessibilidade às instalações desportivas dos estabelecimentos de ensino, desde o nível pré-escolar até à universidade. IV. Promover a inclusão de atividades desportivas para pessoa portadora de deficiência na prática da educação física ministrada nas instituições de ensino públicas e privadas.
Estão CORRETAS:
Alternativas
Q1719215 Educação Física
Considerando a Educação física escolar e a cidadania, analise os itens a seguir:
I. A Educação Física, sendo componente curricular obrigatório na escola, deve integrar o aluno na esfera da cultura corporal de movimento, formando cidadãos conscientes e capazes de transformar a sociedade.
II. É também dever da Educação Física apontar perspectivas metodológicas de ensino e aprendizagem que busquem o desenvolvimento da autonomia, da cooperação, da participação social e da afirmação de valores.
III. Segundo a LDB, no Ensino Fundamental é dever da Educação Física oferecer o ensino com a finalidade de aprendizagem voltada para preparação básica do trabalho e a cidadania do educando.
IV. Superando a visão histórica que limitava a Educação Física na preocupação dos aspectos fisiológicos e técnicos, hoje se considera também as dimensões culturais, sociais, políticas e afetivas do aluno enquanto cidadão.
Estão CORRETAS
Alternativas
Q1719214 Educação Física
Segundo a BNCC, na Unidade Temática Brincadeiras e jogos, o objeto do conhecimentos Jogos eletrônicos, é indicado para:
Alternativas
Q1719213 Educação Física
Na BNCC, cada uma das práticas corporais tematizadas compõe uma das seis unidades temáticas abordadas ao longo do Ensino Fundamental. Cabe destacar que a categorização apresentada não tem pretensões de universalidade, pois se trata de um entendimento possível, entre outros, sobre as denominações das (e as fronteiras entre as) manifestações culturais tematizadas na Educação Física escolar. “Na unidade temática exploram-se expressões e formas de experimentação corporal centradas nas perícias e proezas provocadas pelas situações de imprevisibilidade que se apresentam quando o praticante interage com um ambiente desafiador”.
O conceito em destaque diz respeito a Unidade Temática:
Alternativas
Q1719212 Educação Física
Na BNCC, a Educação Física oferece uma série de possibilidades para enriquecer a experiência das crianças, jovens e adultos na Educação Básica, permitindo o acesso a um vasto universo cultural, que se inscrevem, mas não se restringem, à racionalidade típica dos saberes científicos que, comumente, orienta as práticas pedagógicas na escola.
Esse universo compreende:
I. Saberes corporais.
II. Experiências estéticas.
III. Experiências emotivas.
IV. Experiências lúdicas.
V. Experiências agonistas.
Estão CORRETAS:
Alternativas
Q1719211 Educação Física
Sobre a Avaliação na Educação Física, analise os itens:
I. COGNITIVA - Competências e conhecimentos. II. MOTORA ou PROCEDIMENTAL- Habilidades Motoras e Capacidades Físicas. III. ATITUDINAL - valores.
Está(ão) CORRETA(S):
Alternativas
Q1719210 Educação Física
Segundo o art. 26, § 3º, da LDB, “a educação física, integrada à proposta pedagóg é componente curricular obrigatório da educação básica, sendo sua prática facultativa ao aluno”: Assinale a alternativa INCORRETA:
Alternativas
Q1719209 Educação Física
São práticas de esportes que provocam estímulo para a ingestão marginal de energia, objetivo de manter o peso corporal baixo, compatível com o critério de imagem corporal:
Assinale a alternativa que atente completamente as respectivas práticas esportivas:
Alternativas
Q1719208 Educação Física
Atletas adolescentes do sexo feminino apresentam risco maior para deficiência de ferro devido a suas maiores necessidades fisiológicas, baixo consumo energético (relacionado a esportes com controle de peso), ingestão inadequada de ferro e perdas de ferro relacionadas com a prática esportiva (hemólise por impacto). A ingestão de vitamina A, vitamina C e magnésio pode encontrar-se abaixo das recomendações em grupos de crianças que não possuam o hábito de ingerir frutas e hortaliças.
Dietas muito restritas caloricamente podem ser deficientes em:
Alternativas
Q1719206 Educação Física
Sobre a relação da atividade física e o envelhecimento, analise os itens abaixo e assinale a alternativa INCORRETA:
Alternativas
Respostas
321: B
322: B
323: E
324: A
325: B
326: C
327: D
328: C
329: B
330: D
331: A
332: C
333: D
334: A
335: B
336: E
337: B
338: E
339: D
340: C