Questões de Vestibular EINSTEIN 2024 para Vestibular - Conhecimentos Gerais

Foram encontradas 6 questões

Ano: 2024 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: EINSTEIN Prova: VUNESP - 2024 - EINSTEIN - Vestibular - Conhecimentos Gerais |
Q3350910 Inglês
Examine a tirinha, publicada pelo perfil “The Jenkins” no Instagram em 01.06.2023.
Imagem associada para resolução da questão

Para obter seu efeito de humor, a tirinha explora o seguinte recurso expressivo: 
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Ano: 2024 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: EINSTEIN Prova: VUNESP - 2024 - EINSTEIN - Vestibular - Conhecimentos Gerais |
Q3350920 Inglês
Read the text to answer question.

    When United States (US) Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy pushed for a tobacco-style warning on social media, he called the mental health crisis in young people an emergency that demanded action without waiting for “perfect information.”
    Even among experts, questions remain about the exact role that social media plays in the mental health of children and teens. Authors of a comprehensive new review of research on the topic say there’s still key information missing to know whether prevention programs and interventions will work.
    In the study, published recently in the medical journal JAMA Pediatrics, researchers found an overall link between anxiety and depression in adolescents and the time spent on social media platforms, as well as a link between the types of activities and content they were interacting with. However, the level of impact varied enough to suggest that the findings shouldn’t be generalized to the population as a whole. “In a world increasingly saturated by digital technology, we cannot afford to design prevention programs, interventions, and regulations without knowing that they work for everyone, especially those who are most vulnerable,” wrote the study authors.
     The National Academies committee specifically recommend against a social media ban. Despite potential harms — such as unhealthy social comparisons and distracting from other important healthy behaviors such as sleep, exercise and studying — social media can also benefit young people by helping to foster connection with friends and family, and with online support communities.

(Deidre McPhillips. https://edition.cnn.com, 24.06.2024. Adapted.)
The text mainly discusses the
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Ano: 2024 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: EINSTEIN Prova: VUNESP - 2024 - EINSTEIN - Vestibular - Conhecimentos Gerais |
Q3350921 Inglês
Read the text to answer question.

    When United States (US) Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy pushed for a tobacco-style warning on social media, he called the mental health crisis in young people an emergency that demanded action without waiting for “perfect information.”
    Even among experts, questions remain about the exact role that social media plays in the mental health of children and teens. Authors of a comprehensive new review of research on the topic say there’s still key information missing to know whether prevention programs and interventions will work.
    In the study, published recently in the medical journal JAMA Pediatrics, researchers found an overall link between anxiety and depression in adolescents and the time spent on social media platforms, as well as a link between the types of activities and content they were interacting with. However, the level of impact varied enough to suggest that the findings shouldn’t be generalized to the population as a whole. “In a world increasingly saturated by digital technology, we cannot afford to design prevention programs, interventions, and regulations without knowing that they work for everyone, especially those who are most vulnerable,” wrote the study authors.
     The National Academies committee specifically recommend against a social media ban. Despite potential harms — such as unhealthy social comparisons and distracting from other important healthy behaviors such as sleep, exercise and studying — social media can also benefit young people by helping to foster connection with friends and family, and with online support communities.

(Deidre McPhillips. https://edition.cnn.com, 24.06.2024. Adapted.)
The expression “‘perfect information’”, from the first paragraph, refers to
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Ano: 2024 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: EINSTEIN Prova: VUNESP - 2024 - EINSTEIN - Vestibular - Conhecimentos Gerais |
Q3350922 Inglês
Read the text to answer question.

    When United States (US) Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy pushed for a tobacco-style warning on social media, he called the mental health crisis in young people an emergency that demanded action without waiting for “perfect information.”
    Even among experts, questions remain about the exact role that social media plays in the mental health of children and teens. Authors of a comprehensive new review of research on the topic say there’s still key information missing to know whether prevention programs and interventions will work.
    In the study, published recently in the medical journal JAMA Pediatrics, researchers found an overall link between anxiety and depression in adolescents and the time spent on social media platforms, as well as a link between the types of activities and content they were interacting with. However, the level of impact varied enough to suggest that the findings shouldn’t be generalized to the population as a whole. “In a world increasingly saturated by digital technology, we cannot afford to design prevention programs, interventions, and regulations without knowing that they work for everyone, especially those who are most vulnerable,” wrote the study authors.
     The National Academies committee specifically recommend against a social media ban. Despite potential harms — such as unhealthy social comparisons and distracting from other important healthy behaviors such as sleep, exercise and studying — social media can also benefit young people by helping to foster connection with friends and family, and with online support communities.

(Deidre McPhillips. https://edition.cnn.com, 24.06.2024. Adapted.)
The study described in the third paragraph
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Ano: 2024 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: EINSTEIN Prova: VUNESP - 2024 - EINSTEIN - Vestibular - Conhecimentos Gerais |
Q3350923 Inglês
Read the text to answer question.

    When United States (US) Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy pushed for a tobacco-style warning on social media, he called the mental health crisis in young people an emergency that demanded action without waiting for “perfect information.”
    Even among experts, questions remain about the exact role that social media plays in the mental health of children and teens. Authors of a comprehensive new review of research on the topic say there’s still key information missing to know whether prevention programs and interventions will work.
    In the study, published recently in the medical journal JAMA Pediatrics, researchers found an overall link between anxiety and depression in adolescents and the time spent on social media platforms, as well as a link between the types of activities and content they were interacting with. However, the level of impact varied enough to suggest that the findings shouldn’t be generalized to the population as a whole. “In a world increasingly saturated by digital technology, we cannot afford to design prevention programs, interventions, and regulations without knowing that they work for everyone, especially those who are most vulnerable,” wrote the study authors.
     The National Academies committee specifically recommend against a social media ban. Despite potential harms — such as unhealthy social comparisons and distracting from other important healthy behaviors such as sleep, exercise and studying — social media can also benefit young people by helping to foster connection with friends and family, and with online support communities.

(Deidre McPhillips. https://edition.cnn.com, 24.06.2024. Adapted.)
According to the fourth paragraph, social media use can, potentially, 
Alternativas
Ano: 2024 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: EINSTEIN Prova: VUNESP - 2024 - EINSTEIN - Vestibular - Conhecimentos Gerais |
Q3350924 Inglês
Read the following letter to the editor.

To the Editor:
    Defective airplanes, tobacco products, cars without seatbelts and social media posts: One of these things is not like the others.
    The surgeon general Dr. Vivek Murthy proposes applying warning labels to social media platforms as if they are surely dangerous, like cigarettes and airplanes whose doors fall off during a flight. But there’s another way social media is different: It’s a tool we use to express ourselves. As such, its use is protected by the First Amendment1 .
    This isn’t the first time the government has tried to regulate expression in the name of protecting kids. It tried to do so in the 1950s with comics, the 1980s with rock music and the 1990s with video games. We now look back on these efforts as misguided and unconstitutional.

Nico Perrino
Washington
The writer is the executive vice president of FIRE, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression.
(www.nytimes.com, 24.06.2024. Adapted.)
1First Amendment: an item in the American Constitution that guarantees the people freedom concerning religion and expression, among other rights.

It is the letter writer’s explicit position on protection protocols:
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Respostas
1: C
2: D
3: B
4: A
5: C
6: C