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Q3464001 Inglês
Leia a entrevista a seguir para responder à questão.


Can childhood survive the smartphone? 

Q32_40.png (244×136)


    Below is an excerpt from a conversation between the reporter Katty Kay and Jonathan Haidt who, with his book The Anxious Generation, sparked a global reckoning about mobile phone usage among children when it came out last year.

    Katty Kay: It’s been a year since your book came out and caused a huge conversation. I wanted to start by getting a kind of report card of where we are on the various aspects of what you put forward: phones in school, age gating, social media, getting kids to have more free playtime. Who’s doing well and who isn’t in America on all of those issues?

    Jonathan Haidt: I knew that the book was going to be popular. What I wasn’t prepared for is that this issue would spread like wildfire around the world, not just in the US. Because around the world, family life has turned into a fight over screen time. Everyone hates it. Everyone sees it.

    Where it took off most quickly was phone-free schools, because that is something that is more easily done. It’s so hard to teach to a classroom when half of them are watching short videos and playing video games. So, the teachers have hated the phones from the beginning but they were afraid, especially in America – maybe it’s the same in other countries – but in America, there are a lot of parents who want to be able to communicate all the time with their child, and they think they have a right to check in on their child. And, ‘What if something goes wrong? I need to be there.’ So, the overparenting — ...

    KK: That’s a paradox, then, because you’ve got the parents who are super worried about the phones; they see what phones are doing to their kids. But they also don’t want their kids to relinquish their phones when they go into school. 

    JH: Hey, look, people are complicated! They contain multitudes. And I shouldn’t say that everyone saw the problem, because there were a lot of parents who saw the phone as a lifeline. They see the world as very threatening and dangerous. But we have to focus on what it will take to allow kids to have healthy brain development through puberty. We’ve got to give kids a lot less screen time. A lot less fragmenting time. No TikTok. No short videos. Let’s give them a lot more experience interacting with people.


(Katty Kay. www.bbc.com, 10.04.2025. Adaptado)
In case you did not yet know the meaning of the word “relinquish” before reading this text, and used contextual clues to arrive at its meaning, you employed the compensatory reading strategy known as
Alternativas
Q3464000 Inglês
Leia a entrevista a seguir para responder à questão.


Can childhood survive the smartphone? 

Q32_40.png (244×136)


    Below is an excerpt from a conversation between the reporter Katty Kay and Jonathan Haidt who, with his book The Anxious Generation, sparked a global reckoning about mobile phone usage among children when it came out last year.

    Katty Kay: It’s been a year since your book came out and caused a huge conversation. I wanted to start by getting a kind of report card of where we are on the various aspects of what you put forward: phones in school, age gating, social media, getting kids to have more free playtime. Who’s doing well and who isn’t in America on all of those issues?

    Jonathan Haidt: I knew that the book was going to be popular. What I wasn’t prepared for is that this issue would spread like wildfire around the world, not just in the US. Because around the world, family life has turned into a fight over screen time. Everyone hates it. Everyone sees it.

    Where it took off most quickly was phone-free schools, because that is something that is more easily done. It’s so hard to teach to a classroom when half of them are watching short videos and playing video games. So, the teachers have hated the phones from the beginning but they were afraid, especially in America – maybe it’s the same in other countries – but in America, there are a lot of parents who want to be able to communicate all the time with their child, and they think they have a right to check in on their child. And, ‘What if something goes wrong? I need to be there.’ So, the overparenting — ...

    KK: That’s a paradox, then, because you’ve got the parents who are super worried about the phones; they see what phones are doing to their kids. But they also don’t want their kids to relinquish their phones when they go into school. 

    JH: Hey, look, people are complicated! They contain multitudes. And I shouldn’t say that everyone saw the problem, because there were a lot of parents who saw the phone as a lifeline. They see the world as very threatening and dangerous. But we have to focus on what it will take to allow kids to have healthy brain development through puberty. We’ve got to give kids a lot less screen time. A lot less fragmenting time. No TikTok. No short videos. Let’s give them a lot more experience interacting with people.


(Katty Kay. www.bbc.com, 10.04.2025. Adaptado)
“Relinquish” is a word we don’t see frequently and perhaps are not familiar with. In the context of the fifth paragraph “But they also don’t want their kids to relinquish their phones when they go into school.”, the word means
Alternativas
Q3463999 Inglês
Leia a entrevista a seguir para responder à questão.


Can childhood survive the smartphone? 

Q32_40.png (244×136)


    Below is an excerpt from a conversation between the reporter Katty Kay and Jonathan Haidt who, with his book The Anxious Generation, sparked a global reckoning about mobile phone usage among children when it came out last year.

    Katty Kay: It’s been a year since your book came out and caused a huge conversation. I wanted to start by getting a kind of report card of where we are on the various aspects of what you put forward: phones in school, age gating, social media, getting kids to have more free playtime. Who’s doing well and who isn’t in America on all of those issues?

    Jonathan Haidt: I knew that the book was going to be popular. What I wasn’t prepared for is that this issue would spread like wildfire around the world, not just in the US. Because around the world, family life has turned into a fight over screen time. Everyone hates it. Everyone sees it.

    Where it took off most quickly was phone-free schools, because that is something that is more easily done. It’s so hard to teach to a classroom when half of them are watching short videos and playing video games. So, the teachers have hated the phones from the beginning but they were afraid, especially in America – maybe it’s the same in other countries – but in America, there are a lot of parents who want to be able to communicate all the time with their child, and they think they have a right to check in on their child. And, ‘What if something goes wrong? I need to be there.’ So, the overparenting — ...

    KK: That’s a paradox, then, because you’ve got the parents who are super worried about the phones; they see what phones are doing to their kids. But they also don’t want their kids to relinquish their phones when they go into school. 

    JH: Hey, look, people are complicated! They contain multitudes. And I shouldn’t say that everyone saw the problem, because there were a lot of parents who saw the phone as a lifeline. They see the world as very threatening and dangerous. But we have to focus on what it will take to allow kids to have healthy brain development through puberty. We’ve got to give kids a lot less screen time. A lot less fragmenting time. No TikTok. No short videos. Let’s give them a lot more experience interacting with people.


(Katty Kay. www.bbc.com, 10.04.2025. Adaptado)
The prefix over- has a variety of possible meanings. Mark the alternative in which the prefix means the same as in “overparenting” (paragraph 4). 
Alternativas
Q3463998 Inglês
Leia a entrevista a seguir para responder à questão.


Can childhood survive the smartphone? 

Q32_40.png (244×136)


    Below is an excerpt from a conversation between the reporter Katty Kay and Jonathan Haidt who, with his book The Anxious Generation, sparked a global reckoning about mobile phone usage among children when it came out last year.

    Katty Kay: It’s been a year since your book came out and caused a huge conversation. I wanted to start by getting a kind of report card of where we are on the various aspects of what you put forward: phones in school, age gating, social media, getting kids to have more free playtime. Who’s doing well and who isn’t in America on all of those issues?

    Jonathan Haidt: I knew that the book was going to be popular. What I wasn’t prepared for is that this issue would spread like wildfire around the world, not just in the US. Because around the world, family life has turned into a fight over screen time. Everyone hates it. Everyone sees it.

    Where it took off most quickly was phone-free schools, because that is something that is more easily done. It’s so hard to teach to a classroom when half of them are watching short videos and playing video games. So, the teachers have hated the phones from the beginning but they were afraid, especially in America – maybe it’s the same in other countries – but in America, there are a lot of parents who want to be able to communicate all the time with their child, and they think they have a right to check in on their child. And, ‘What if something goes wrong? I need to be there.’ So, the overparenting — ...

    KK: That’s a paradox, then, because you’ve got the parents who are super worried about the phones; they see what phones are doing to their kids. But they also don’t want their kids to relinquish their phones when they go into school. 

    JH: Hey, look, people are complicated! They contain multitudes. And I shouldn’t say that everyone saw the problem, because there were a lot of parents who saw the phone as a lifeline. They see the world as very threatening and dangerous. But we have to focus on what it will take to allow kids to have healthy brain development through puberty. We’ve got to give kids a lot less screen time. A lot less fragmenting time. No TikTok. No short videos. Let’s give them a lot more experience interacting with people.


(Katty Kay. www.bbc.com, 10.04.2025. Adaptado)
In the context of the fourth paragraph, the fragment “– maybe it’s the same in other countries –” functions as
Alternativas
Q3463997 Inglês
Leia a entrevista a seguir para responder à questão.


Can childhood survive the smartphone? 

Q32_40.png (244×136)


    Below is an excerpt from a conversation between the reporter Katty Kay and Jonathan Haidt who, with his book The Anxious Generation, sparked a global reckoning about mobile phone usage among children when it came out last year.

    Katty Kay: It’s been a year since your book came out and caused a huge conversation. I wanted to start by getting a kind of report card of where we are on the various aspects of what you put forward: phones in school, age gating, social media, getting kids to have more free playtime. Who’s doing well and who isn’t in America on all of those issues?

    Jonathan Haidt: I knew that the book was going to be popular. What I wasn’t prepared for is that this issue would spread like wildfire around the world, not just in the US. Because around the world, family life has turned into a fight over screen time. Everyone hates it. Everyone sees it.

    Where it took off most quickly was phone-free schools, because that is something that is more easily done. It’s so hard to teach to a classroom when half of them are watching short videos and playing video games. So, the teachers have hated the phones from the beginning but they were afraid, especially in America – maybe it’s the same in other countries – but in America, there are a lot of parents who want to be able to communicate all the time with their child, and they think they have a right to check in on their child. And, ‘What if something goes wrong? I need to be there.’ So, the overparenting — ...

    KK: That’s a paradox, then, because you’ve got the parents who are super worried about the phones; they see what phones are doing to their kids. But they also don’t want their kids to relinquish their phones when they go into school. 

    JH: Hey, look, people are complicated! They contain multitudes. And I shouldn’t say that everyone saw the problem, because there were a lot of parents who saw the phone as a lifeline. They see the world as very threatening and dangerous. But we have to focus on what it will take to allow kids to have healthy brain development through puberty. We’ve got to give kids a lot less screen time. A lot less fragmenting time. No TikTok. No short videos. Let’s give them a lot more experience interacting with people.


(Katty Kay. www.bbc.com, 10.04.2025. Adaptado)
The sentence which starts the dialogue between interviewer and interviewee “It’s been a year since your book came out and caused a huge conversation” has a verb in the present perfect tense. Another correct use of the present perfect is found in alternative:
Alternativas
Q3463996 Inglês
Leia a entrevista a seguir para responder à questão.


Can childhood survive the smartphone? 

Q32_40.png (244×136)


    Below is an excerpt from a conversation between the reporter Katty Kay and Jonathan Haidt who, with his book The Anxious Generation, sparked a global reckoning about mobile phone usage among children when it came out last year.

    Katty Kay: It’s been a year since your book came out and caused a huge conversation. I wanted to start by getting a kind of report card of where we are on the various aspects of what you put forward: phones in school, age gating, social media, getting kids to have more free playtime. Who’s doing well and who isn’t in America on all of those issues?

    Jonathan Haidt: I knew that the book was going to be popular. What I wasn’t prepared for is that this issue would spread like wildfire around the world, not just in the US. Because around the world, family life has turned into a fight over screen time. Everyone hates it. Everyone sees it.

    Where it took off most quickly was phone-free schools, because that is something that is more easily done. It’s so hard to teach to a classroom when half of them are watching short videos and playing video games. So, the teachers have hated the phones from the beginning but they were afraid, especially in America – maybe it’s the same in other countries – but in America, there are a lot of parents who want to be able to communicate all the time with their child, and they think they have a right to check in on their child. And, ‘What if something goes wrong? I need to be there.’ So, the overparenting — ...

    KK: That’s a paradox, then, because you’ve got the parents who are super worried about the phones; they see what phones are doing to their kids. But they also don’t want their kids to relinquish their phones when they go into school. 

    JH: Hey, look, people are complicated! They contain multitudes. And I shouldn’t say that everyone saw the problem, because there were a lot of parents who saw the phone as a lifeline. They see the world as very threatening and dangerous. But we have to focus on what it will take to allow kids to have healthy brain development through puberty. We’ve got to give kids a lot less screen time. A lot less fragmenting time. No TikTok. No short videos. Let’s give them a lot more experience interacting with people.


(Katty Kay. www.bbc.com, 10.04.2025. Adaptado)
According to the author of The Anxious Generation, one main difficulty in banning child smartphone use from American schools is
Alternativas
Q3463995 Inglês
Read the text and the dialogue which follows it.

“No mundo real, raramente as perguntas se referem a um único tipo de conteúdo. Para preparar os alunos para isso, tente avançar a partir de uma resposta certa, pedindo que integrem a ela conhecimentos aprendidos anteriormente.”

(Doug Lemov. Aula Nota 10 3.0, 2022. Adaptado)

Teacher: Who would like to use the verb “cook” in a sentence?”
Student: I like to cook. Teacher: Good! Who would add an indirect object to the sentence?
Student: I like to cook to my family.
Teacher: Could you use a compound indirect object?
Student: I like to cook to my family and friends.
Teacher: When do you cook to them? Add a time adverb to your sentence.
Student: I like to cook to my family and friends on weekends.

The interventions by the teacher recover the students’ knowledge about
Alternativas
Q3456931 Pedagogia
Leia o excerto a seguir, extraído do art. 12 da Resolução CNE/CEB nº 07/2010 (Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais para o Ensino Fundamental de 9 anos):

“_____________________ têm origem nas disciplinas científicas, no desenvolvimento das linguagens, no mundo do trabalho, na cultura e na tecnologia, na produção artística, nas atividades desportivas e corporais, na área da saúde e ainda incorporam saberes como os que advêm das formas diversas de exercício da cidadania, dos movimentos sociais, da cultura escolar, da experiência docente, do cotidiano e dos alunos”.

Assinale a alternativa que preenche corretamente a lacuna.
Alternativas
Q3456930 Pedagogia
De acordo com o art. 24 da Resolução CNE/CEB no 04/2010 (Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais Gerais para a Educação Básica), os objetivos da formação básica se ampliam e se intensificam gradativamente no processo educativo, desde a Educação Infantil até os anos finais do Ensino Fundamental, o que acontece mediante, entre outros,
Alternativas
Q3456929 Direito Constitucional
O art. 215 da Constituição Federal de 1988 trata do exercício dos direitos culturais e acesso às fontes da cultura nacional, garantindo ainda o apoio e incentivo à “valorização e a difusão das manifestações culturais”. No parágrafo 1° do mesmo artigo, afirma-se que o Estado
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Q3456928 Pedagogia
O art. 54 do ECA (Estatuto da Criança e do Adolescente, Lei Federal no 8.069/1990), no que diz respeito à criança e ao adolescente com deficiência, estabelece como dever do Estado assegurar
Alternativas
Q3456927 Pedagogia
Vinha (1999) conta que, a partir de sua experiência como coordenadora pedagógica de uma escola de Itatiba, passou a pesquisar a área da moralidade. Nesse contexto, a autora narra que ela e o grupo de professores não queriam reproduzir a educação autoritária que tiveram, tendo como preocupação
Alternativas
Q3456926 Pedagogia
Resende (em Veiga, 1998) observa que “os referenciais que buscam a cultura da diversidade do coletivo e do multiculturalismo colidem com os referenciais epistemológicos opostos”. Para ir além do discurso democrático, a escola precisa, entre outros aspectos,
Alternativas
Q3456925 Pedagogia
Veiga (1996) entende que a principal possibilidade de construção do projeto político-pedagógico passa pela
Alternativas
Q3456924 Pedagogia
Moran (2004) reflete sobre as mudanças na prática pedagógica diante da presença crescente das tecnologias. Na compreensão do autor, a internet
Alternativas
Q3456923 Pedagogia
Leia o texto a seguir para responder à questão.


Diego é professor em uma escola de Itatiba. Ele valoriza as informações que transmite a seus alunos e exige que estes permaneçam alertas às informações. Assim, procura oferecer explicações claras e textos explicativos consistentes, além de organizar o ambiente pedagógico. Além disso, Diego permanece atento a seus alunos, entendendo-os como seu objeto de estudo, que por isso devem ser captados por atributos palpáveis, mensuráveis, observáveis. Assim, sua prática avaliativa revela intenções de coleta de informações em relação ao aluno, dele registrando dados precisos e fidedignos. Em sua perspectiva, diante de todo seu esforço, a maioria de seus alunos aprende; só não aprende o aluno que faltar, não estiver atento às explicações ou não realizar as tarefas por ele solicitadas.
Na perspectiva de Hoffman, professores que agem como Diego
Alternativas
Q3456922 Pedagogia
Leia o texto a seguir para responder à questão.


Diego é professor em uma escola de Itatiba. Ele valoriza as informações que transmite a seus alunos e exige que estes permaneçam alertas às informações. Assim, procura oferecer explicações claras e textos explicativos consistentes, além de organizar o ambiente pedagógico. Além disso, Diego permanece atento a seus alunos, entendendo-os como seu objeto de estudo, que por isso devem ser captados por atributos palpáveis, mensuráveis, observáveis. Assim, sua prática avaliativa revela intenções de coleta de informações em relação ao aluno, dele registrando dados precisos e fidedignos. Em sua perspectiva, diante de todo seu esforço, a maioria de seus alunos aprende; só não aprende o aluno que faltar, não estiver atento às explicações ou não realizar as tarefas por ele solicitadas.
De acordo com Hoffmann, práticas avaliativas como as de Diego, com base na observação e no registro de dados, vinculam-se a uma
Alternativas
Q3456921 Pedagogia
Conforme propõe Lenise Garcia, os temas transversais devem
Alternativas
Q3456920 Pedagogia
De acordo com Fontana (1996), Vygotsky considera o processo de conceitualização como único e integrado, mas diferencia a atividade mental centrada na vida cotidiana daquela que se elabora na escola. Isso porque as interações escolarizadas são caracterizadas, entre outros aspectos, por terem uma
Alternativas
Q3456919 Pedagogia
Para Dowbor (2007), a ideia da educação para o desenvolvimento local está diretamente vinculada à compreensão e à necessidade de se
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Respostas
6141: B
6142: C
6143: A
6144: B
6145: E
6146: D
6147: A
6148: D
6149: D
6150: E
6151: B
6152: E
6153: A
6154: D
6155: E
6156: C
6157: B
6158: C
6159: A
6160: B