Mostrando postagens com marcador 2015. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador 2015. Mostrar todas as postagens

sexta-feira, 28 de março de 2025

UEMG 2015 – LÍNGUA INGLESA – DIVINÓPOLIS/PASSOS

www.inglesparaconcursos.blog.br

❑  PROVA DE LÍNGUA INGLESA:
  • UNIVERSIDADE DO ESTADO DE MINAS GERAIS-
    DIVINÓPOLIS-VESTIBULAR--2015.
❑ ESTRUTURA-PROVA:
  • 06 MCQs (Multiple Choice Questions) / 4 Options Each Question.

PROVA, TRADUÇÃO, GABARITO & MUITO VOCABULÁRIO

❑ TEXTO:
MAN AND DOLPHIN: MUTUAL FASCINATION OR ANTHROPOMORPHISM?

Stories describing the mutual fascination between dolphins and humans have existed throughout history and across cultures. As research into dolphin intelligence continues, scientists learn more about dolphins and their levels of self-awareness. Most researchers agree that dolphins exhibit a level of intelligence – which is not the same thing as self-awareness – greater than that of a dog and even comparable to that of some primates, but not humans.

While not denying dolphins’ intelligence, there is a fundamental question to consider: who gets the most out of the relationship between humans and dolphins? Is it us or them? It seems that dolphins adapt well to human companionship and are easily trained to perform complex tricks and tasks, leading us to assume that dolphins enjoy being around us as much as we enjoy being with them. So, is it possible that dolphins share our company simply for their own amusement? Do dolphins, or other animal species, in fact become bored with their own kind? The truth may be that the relationship is more one-sided than we like to think.

A few years ago, a pod of dolphins circled protectively round a group of swimmers to fend off an attack by a great white shark. The swimmers, including a lifeguard and his family,  were swimming 300 feet off Ocean Beach near Whangarei on the New Zealand ́s North Island when the dolphins started rounding them up, apparently to protect them from the huge shark. One of the swimmers said: ‘The dolphins started to herd us up; they pushed all of us together by swimming in tight circles around us’.

The group of swimmers spent approximately 40 minutes surrounded by the dolphins before
the shark left and they could safely swim back to shore. A marine mammal research scientist at
Auckland University said that dolphins were normally vigilant in the presence of sharks. This
altruistic response of the dolphins is normal dolphin behavior: ‘They like helping the helpless’.
  • Adapted from Framework Advanced (p. 39), Richmond Publishing, 2005.
49 – (UEMG-VESTIBULAR-DIVINÓPOLIS/PASSOS-2015) What is the text mainly about?
(A) There are different types of dolphins.
(B) Dolphins are humans’ favorite creatures.
(C) Sharks and dolphins are deadly enemies.
(D) Dolphins are selfless marine animals.
      Comentários e Gabarito    D  
TÓPICOS - VOCABULÁRIO & RELAÇÃO SEMÂNTICA COM TRECHO DO TEXTO:
What is the text mainly about?
Sobre o que o texto aborda principalmente?
(A) There are different types of dolphins.
Existem diferentes tipos de golfinhos.
(B) Dolphins are humans’ favorite creatures.
Golfinhos são as criaturas favoritas dos humanos.
(C) Sharks and dolphins are deadly enemies.
Tubarões e golfinhos são inimigos mortais.
(D) Dolphins are selfless marine animals.
Golfinhos são animais marinhos altruístas.

50 – (UEMG-VESTIBULAR-DIVINÓPOLIS/PASSOS-2015) What does the author mean with anthropomorphism in the title of the text?
A) Dolphins are physically similar to humans.
B) Dolphins have human characteristics.
C) Dolphins are more intelligent than humans.
D) Dolphins are narcissistic animals.
      Comentários e Gabarito    B  
TÓPICOS - VOCABULÁRIO & RELAÇÃO SEMÂNTICA COM TRECHO DO TEXTO:
What does the author mean with anthropomorphism in the title of the text?
O que o autor quer dizer com antropomorfismo no título do texto?
(A) Dolphins are physically similar to humans.
Os golfinhos são fisicamente semelhantes aos humanos.
(B) Dolphins have human characteristics.
Os golfinhos têm características humanas.
(C) Dolphins are more intelligent than humans.
Os golfinhos são mais inteligentes que os humanos.
(D) Dolphins are narcissistic animals.
Os golfinhos são animais narcisistas.

51 – (UEMG-VESTIBULAR-DIVINÓPOLIS/PASSOS-2015) In the sentence
  • “So, is it possible that dolphins share our company simply for their own amusement?” (3rd paragraph),
what does "amusement" mean?
(A) Pleasure
(B) Loneliness
(C) Sadness
(D) Boredom
      Comentários e Gabarito    A  
TÓPICOS - VOCABULÁRIO & RELAÇÃO SEMÂNTICA COM TRECHO DO TEXTO:
  • “So, is it possible that dolphins share our company simply for their own amusement?
  • Então, é possível que os golfinhos compartilhem nossa companhia simplesmente para sua própria diversão?
what does "amusement" mean?
(A) Pleasure Prazer
(B) Loneliness Solidão
(C) Sadness Tristeza
(D) Boredom Tédio

52 – (UEMG-VESTIBULAR-DIVINÓPOLIS/PASSOS-2015) Which alternative has the CORRECT sequence to complete the gaps below?
  • If the swimmers ____ saved by the dolphins, they ____ die.
(A) mustn’t, will
(B) aren’t, would
(C) weren’t, would
(D) couldn’t, shall
      Comentários e Gabarito    C  
TÓPICOS - VOCABULÁRIO & RELAÇÃO SEMÂNTICA COM TRECHO DO TEXTO:
  • If the swimmers weren’t saved by the dolphins, they would die.
  • Se os nadadores não fossem salvos pelos golfinhos, eles morreriam.
A) mustn’t, will
B) aren’t, would
C) weren’t, would
D) couldn’t, shall

53 – (UEMG-VESTIBULAR-DIVINÓPOLIS/PASSOS-2015) Read the passage below to complete the gaps (1-4):
  • The dolphins, ___ are marine animals, and ___ intelligence is considered high, have saved a group of people ___ were swimming 300 feet off Ocean Beach, ___ there was a great white shark.
1. whose
2. where
3. which
4. who
The CORRECT sequence is
A) (1), (3), (2), (4).
B) (3), (1), (4), (2).
C) (4), (3), (2), (1).
D) (3), (4), (1), (2).
      Comentários e Gabarito    B  
TÓPICO - RELATIVE PRONOUNS:
  • The dolphins, which are marine animals, and whose intelligence is considered high, have saved a group of people who were swimming 300 feet off Ocean Beach, where there was a great white shark.
  • Os golfinhos, que são animais marinhos e cuja inteligência é considerada elevada, salvaram um grupo de pessoas que nadava a 300 metros de Ocean Beach, onde se encontrava um tubarão-branco.
54 – (UEMG-VESTIBULAR-DIVINÓPOLIS/PASSOS-2015) What is the synonym of the expression underlined below?
  • "They carried out the experiment successfully".
A) Described
B) Learned
C) Exhibited
D) Performed
      Comentários e Gabarito    D  
TÓPICOS - "CARRIED OUT " & "PERFORMED":
  • "They carried out the experiment successfully".
  • “Eles realizaram a experiência com sucesso”.
A) Described Descreveram
B) Learned Aprenderam
C) Exhibited Exibiram
D) Performed Realizaram

UEMG 2015

www.inglesparaconcursos.blog.br

❑  PROVA DE LÍNGUA INGLESA:
  • UNIVERSIDADE DO ESTADO DE MINAS GERAIS-
    VESTIBULAR-2015.
❑ ESTRUTURA-PROVA:
  • 06 MCQs (Multiple Choice Questions) / 4 Options Each Question.

PROVA, TRADUÇÃO, GABARITO & MUITO VOCABULÁRIO

❑ TEXTORead the article below and answer the questions that follow.
Virtual People, Real Friends
by Anna Pickard (The Guardian)

The benefits of forming friendships with those we meet online are obvious, so why is the idea still treated with such disdain?

Another week, another survey claiming to reveal great truths about ourselves. This one says that people are increasingly turning “online friends” into people they’d think worthy of calling real-life friends. Well, that’s stating the obvious, I would have thought! If there’s a more perfect place for making friends, I have yet to find it. However, when surveys like this are reported in the media, it’s always with a slight air of “it’s a crazy, crazy world!” And whenever the subject crops up in the conversation, it’s clear that people look down on friends like these. In fact some members of my family still refer to my partner of six years as my “Internet Boyfriend.”

It’s the shocked reaction that surprises me as if people on the internet were not “real” at all. Certainly, people play a character online quite often – they may be a more confident or more argumentative version of their real selves – but what’s the alternative? Is meeting people at work so much better than making friends in a virtual world? Perhaps, but for some a professional
distance between their “work” selves and their “social” selves is necessary, especially, if they tend to let their guard down and might say or do something they will later regret.

Those people disapproving of online friendships argue that the concept of “friendship” is used loosely in a world driven by technology, in which you might have a thousand online friends. They make a distinction between “social connections” – acquaintances who are only one click away – and meaningful human interaction, which they say requires time and effort. They note that for many Facebook “friends,” conversation is a way of exchanging information quickly and efficiently rather than being a social activity.

However, I’ve found that far from being the home of oddballs and potential serial killers, the internet is full of like-minded people. For the first time in history, we’re lucky to enough to choose friends not by location or luck, but by those who have similar interests and senses of humour, or passionate feelings about the same things. The friends I’ve made online might be spread wide geographically, but I’m closer to them than anyone I went to school with, by millions miles. They are the best friends I have.

Obviously, there will be concerns about the dangers of online friendship. There are always stories buzzing around such as “man runs off with the woman he met on Second Life” or people who meet their “soulmate” online and are never seen again. But people are people, whether online or not. As for “real” friendship dying out, surely, is social networking simply redefining our notion of what this is in the twenty-first century? The figures – half a billion Facebook users worldwide – speak for themselves. And technology has allowed countless numbers of these people to keep in close contact with their loved ones, however far away they are. Without it, many disabled or household people might go without social contact at all. Call me naive, call me a social misfit, I don’t care. Virtual people make best real friends.
  • Adapted from http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2009/jan/02/internet-relationships
❑ TRADUÇÃO DO TEXTO:
Virtual People, Real Friends
Pessoas virtuais, Amigos reais
by Anna Pickard (The Guardian)

The benefits of forming friendships with those we meet online are obvious, so why is the idea still treated with such disdain?
Os benefícios de fazer amizade com aqueles que conhecemos online são óbvios, então porque é que a ideia ainda é tratada com tanto desdém?
  • "so why is the idea" - então porque é que a ideia.
  • "still treated" - ainda tratado.
  • "with such" - com tanto.
Another week, another survey claiming to reveal great truths about ourselves.
Mais uma semana, mais uma pesquisa que afirma revelar grandes verdades sobre nós próprios.
This one says that people are increasingly turning “online friends” into people they’d think worthy of calling real-life friends.
Esta diz que as pessoas estão cada vez mais  transformando os “amigos online” em pessoas que considerariam dignas de chamar amigos da vida real.
Well, that’s stating the obvious, I would have thought!
Bem, isso é afirmar o óbvio, teria pensado!
If there’s a more perfect place for making friends, I have yet to find it.
Se há um lugar mais perfeito para fazer amigos, ainda não o encontrei.
However, when surveys like this are reported in the media, it’s always with a slight air of “it’s a crazy, crazy world!”
No entanto, quando pesquisas como esta são divulgadas na mídia, é sempre com um ligeiro ar de “é um mundo louco, muito louco!”
And whenever the subject crops up in the conversation, it’s clear that people look down on friends like these.
E sempre que o assunto surge na conversa, percebe-se que as pessoas menosprezam amigos como estes.
  • "crops up in the conversation" - surge na conversa.
  • "look down on friends" - menosprezam amigos.
In fact some members of my family still refer to my partner of six years as my “Internet Boyfriend.”
Na verdade, alguns membros da minha família ainda se referem ao meu companheiro de seis anos como o meu “namorado da Internet”.
It’s the shocked reaction that surprises me as if people on the internet were not “real” at all.
É a reação de choque que me surpreende, como se as pessoas na internet não fossem “reais”.
Certainly, people play a character online quite often – they may be a more confident or more argumentative version of their real selves – but what’s the alternative?
Certamente, as pessoas interpretam uma personagem online com bastante frequência – podem ser uma versão mais confiante ou mais argumentativa do seu verdadeiro eu – mas qual é a alternativa?
  • "a character online" - uma personagem online.
  • "quite often" - uma personagem online.
  • "they may be" - podem ser.
Is meeting people at work so much better than making friends in a virtual world?
Conhecer pessoas no trabalho é muito melhor do que fazer amigos num mundo virtual?
Perhaps, but for some a professional
distance between their “work” selves and their “social” selves is necessary, especially, if they tend to let their guard down and might say or do something they will later regret.
Talvez, mas para alguns um profissional
a distância entre o seu eu “profissional” e o seu eu “social” é necessária, especialmente se tendem a baixar a guarda e podem dizer ou fazer algo de que se arrependerão mais tarde.
Those people disapproving of online friendships argue that the concept of “friendship” is used loosely in a world driven by technology, in which you might have a thousand online friends.
As pessoas que desaprovam as amizades online argumentam que o conceito de “amizade” é usado de forma vaga num mundo impulsionado pela tecnologia, no qual podemos ter mil amigos online.
They make a distinction between “social connections” – acquaintances who are only one click away – and meaningful human interaction, which they say requires time and effort.
Fazem uma distinção entre “conexões sociais” – conhecidos que estão à distância de um clique – e interação humana significativa, que, segundo eles, requer tempo e esforço.
  • "acquaintances" - conhecidos, conhecidas.
  • "meaningful human interaction" - interação humana significativa.
They note that for many Facebook “friends,” conversation is a way of exchanging information quickly and efficiently rather than being a social activity.
Observam que, para muitos “amigos” do Facebook, a conversação é uma forma de trocar informações de forma rápida e eficiente, em vez de ser uma atividade social.
  • "rather than being" - em vez de ser.
However, I’ve found that far from being the home of oddballs and potential serial killers, the internet is full of like-minded people.
No entanto, descobri que, longe de ser o lar de excêntricos e potenciais assassinos em série, a Internet está cheia de pessoas que pensam como eu.
  • "far from being" - longe de ser.
  • "is full of like-minded people" - está cheia de pessoas que pensam como eu.
For the first time in history, we’re lucky to enough to choose friends not by location or luck, but by those who have similar interests and senses of humour, or passionate feelings about the same things.
Pela primeira vez na história, temos a sorte de escolher amigos não pela localização ou sorte, mas por aqueles que têm interesses e sentidos de humor semelhantes, ou sentimentos apaixonados pelas mesmas coisas.
  • "For the first time" - Pela primeira vez.
The friends I’ve made online might be spread wide geographically, but I’m closer to them than anyone I went to school with, by millions miles.
Os amigos que fiz online podem estar espalhados geograficamente, mas estou mais perto deles do que qualquer pessoa com quem estudei, a milhões de milhas.
They are the best friends I have.
São os melhores amigos que tenho.
Obviously, there will be concerns about the dangers of online friendship.
Obviamente, haverá preocupações sobre os perigos da amizade online.
  • "online friendship" - amizade online.
There are always stories buzzing around such as “man runs off with the woman he met on Second Life” or people who meet their “soulmate” online and are never seen again.
Há sempre histórias circulando por aí, como “homem foge com a mulher que conheceu no Second Life” ou pessoas que conhecem a sua “alma gêmea” online e nunca mais são vistas.
  • "Buzzing around" – Circulando por aí, Zoando em volta, Zoando ao redor.
  • "runs off with someone" – fugir com alguém.
  • "soulmate" – “alma gêmea”.
But people are people, whether online or not.
Mas pessoas são pessoas, estejam elas online ou não.
As for “real” friendship dying out, surely, is social networking simply redefining our notion of what this is in the twenty-first century?
Quanto à extinção da amizade “real”, certamente que as redes sociais estão simplesmente redefinindo a nossa noção do que isso é no século XXI?
The figures – half a billion Facebook users worldwide – speak for themselves.
Os números – meio bilião de usuários do Facebook em todo o mundo – falam por si.
  • "The figures" – Os números.
  • "speak for themselves" – falam por si só.
  • "half a billion– meio bilhão.
  • "users worldwide– usuários em todo o mundo.
And technology has allowed countless numbers of these people to keep in close contact with their loved ones, however far away they are.
E a tecnologia permitiu que um número incontável destas pessoas mantivesse um contato próximo com os seus entes queridos, por mais distantes que estivessem.
  • "countless numbers" – incontáveis ​​​​números.
  • "however far away they are" – por mais distantes que estivessem.
Without it, many disabled or household people might go without social contact at all.
Sem ela, muitas pessoas com deficiência ou famílias poderiam ficar sem qualquer contato social.
Call me naive, call me a social misfit, I don’t care. Virtual people make best real friends.
Chamem-me ingênuo, chamem-me desajustado social, não me importo. As pessoas virtuais são melhores amigos reais.

49 – (UEMG-VESTIBULAR-2015) What is the article mainly about?
(A) Making friends online is the only way to improve your business.
(B) Making friends through Facebook is worse than face-to-face relationships.
(C) Making friends online helps one to be in touch with other people.
(D) Making friends through Facebook can only bring about dangerous situations.
      Comentários e Gabarito    C  
TÓPICOS - VOCABULÁRIO & RELAÇÃO SEMÂNTICA COM TRECHO DO TEXTO:
What is the article mainly about?
Sobre o que trata principalmente o artigo?
A) Making friends online is the only way to improve your business.
Fazer amigos online é a única forma de melhorar o seu negócio.
B) Making friends through Facebook is worse than face-to-face relationships.
Fazer amigos através do Facebook é pior do que as relações cara a cara.
C) Making friends online helps one to be in touch with other people.
Fazer amigos online ajuda a entrar em contato com outras pessoas.
D) Making friends through Facebook can only bring about dangerous situations.
Fazer amigos através do Facebook só pode trazer situações perigosas.
>> TRECHO QUE JUSTIFICA:
  • "[...] And technology has allowed countless numbers of these people to keep in close contact with their loved ones, however far away they are."
  • E a tecnologia permitiu que um número incontável destas pessoas mantivesse um contato próximo com os seus entes queridos, por mais distantes que estivessem.
50 – (UEMG-VESTIBULAR-2015) In the sentence
  • “(...) acquaintances who are only one click away (...)” (4th paragraph),
what does acquaintance mean?
(A) Someone who is unfamiliar to you.
(B) Someone who is known but who is not a close friend.
(C) Someone who gets nervous when they are online.
(D) Someone who is your real friend.
      Comentários e Gabarito    B  
TÓPICO - "ACQUAINTANCE" (= Someone who is known but who is not a close friend):
In the sentence
  • “(...) acquaintances who are only one click away (...)” (4th paragraph),
  • “(...) conhecidos que estão à distância de um clique (...)”
what does acquaintance mean?
A) Someone who is unfamiliar to you.
Alguém que não conhece.
B) Someone who is known but who is not a close friend.
Alguém que é conhecido, mas que não é um amigo próximo.
C) Someone who gets nervous when they are online.
Alguém que fica nervoso quando está online.
D) Someone who is your real friend.
Alguém que é o seu verdadeiro amigo.
>> "ACQUANTANCE" (= friend) – Alguém que é conhecido, mas que não é um amigo próximo.(https://dictionary.cambridge.org)

51 – (UEMG-VESTIBULAR-2015) Read the passage below to complete the gaps with the relative pronouns (1- 4):
  • Online friends are people ___ always post messages and pictures of the places ___ they are, ___ they are with and ___ they are doing.
1. what
2. who
3. whom
4. where
The CORRECT sequence is:
A) (1), (3), (2), (4)
B) (3), (1), (4), (2)
C) (4), (2), (1), (3)
D) (2), (4), (3), (1)
      Comentários e Gabarito    D  
TÓPICO - USO DO PRONOMES RELATIVOS:
  • Online friends are people who always post messages and pictures of the places where they are, whom they are with and what they are doing.
  • Os amigos online são pessoas que publicam sempre mensagens e fotografias dos locais onde elas estão, com quem estão e o que estão fazendo.
1. what
2. who
3. whom
4. where

52 – (UEMG-VESTIBULAR-2015) What is the synonym of the idiomatic expression underlined below?
  • It’s clear that people look down on friends like these.
(A) To be excited about something or someone.
(B) To have a lot of respect for someone or something.
(C) To consider someone or something as not important or of value.
(D) To search and find information about someone or something.
      Comentários e Gabarito    C  
TÓPICO - EXPRESSÃO IDIOMÁTICA "LOOK DOWN ON":
What is the synonym of the idiomatic expression underlined below?
Qual é o sinônimo da expressão idiomática sublinhada abaixo?
  • It’s clear that people look down on friends like these.
  • É claro que as pessoas desprezam amigos como estes.
(A) To be excited about something or someone.
Estar entusiasmado com algo ou alguém.
(B) To have a lot of respect for someone or something.
Ter muito respeito por alguém ou por alguma coisa.
(C) To consider someone or something as not important or of value.
Considerar alguém ou algo como não importante ou sem valor.
(D) To search and find information about someone or something.
Pesquisar e encontrar informação sobre alguém ou alguma coisa.
>> "LOOK DOWN ON" - to regard as inferior.(https://dictionary.cambridge.org)

53 – (UEMG-VESTIBULAR-2015) Which alternative contains the correct conditional to complete the gap below?
  • He would have chatted with his Facebook friends last night if he _____ so busy.
(A) hadn’t been
(B) wasn’t
(C) weren’t
(D) hasn’t been
      Comentários e Gabarito    A  
TÓPICO - 3ª Condicional (IF + Past Perfect, WOULD HAVE + Past Participle):
Which alternative contains the correct conditional to complete the gap below?
  • He would have chatted with his Facebook friends last night if he hadn’t been so busy.
  • Ele teria conversado com os seus amigos do Facebook ontem à noite se não estivesse tão ocupado.
(A) hadn’t been (Past Perfect)
(B) wasn’t (Past Simple)
(C) weren’t (Past Simple)
(D) hasn’t been (Present Perfect)

54 – (UEMG-VESTIBULAR-2015) According to the writer, how does she feel about having online friends?
(A) It is not possible for shy people to make real friends.
(B) It is a chance for people to find real friendship.
(C) It is the best place to find one’s soulmate.
(D) It is hard to keep in touch with people who live miles away from you.
      Comentários e Gabarito    B  
TÓPICOS - VOCABULÁRIO & RELAÇÃO SEMÂNTICA COM TRECHO DO TEXTO:
According to the writer, how does she feel about having online friends?
Segundo a escritora, como se sente por ter amigos online?
(A) It is not possible for shy people to make real friends.
Não é possível que as pessoas tímidas façam amigos de verdade.
(B) It is a chance for people to find real friendship.
É uma hipótese para as pessoas encontrarem uma amizade verdadeira.
(C) It is the best place to find one’s soulmate.
É o melhor local para encontrar a alma gêmea.
(D) It is hard to keep in touch with people who live miles away from you.
É difícil manter o contato com pessoas que vivem a milhas de distância entre si.

domingo, 23 de maio de 2021

UECE–2015.1–VESTIBULAR–2ª FASE

www.inglesparaconcursos.blog.br

❑ PROVA DE LÍNGUA INGLESA:
 UECE-2015.1-VESTIBULAR-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-07/12/14.
❑ ESTRUTURA-PROVA:
 20 MCQ (Multiple Choice Question) / 4 Options Each Question.
 Texto – | Is E-Reading to Your Toddler Story Time, or Simply Screen Time? | www.nytimes.com |

PROVA, TRADUÇÃO, GABARITO & MUITO VOCABULÁRIO

 FONTE DO TEXTO:
The New York Times é um jornal diário estadunidense. A versão impressa do jornal tem a segunda maior circulação, atrás do The Wall Street Journal. Apelidado de "The Lady Gray", o New York Times há muito tempo tem sido considerado um "jornal de referência" nacional. 

 TEXTO:


01-C, 02-B, 03-B, 04-D, 05-B
06-A, 07-B, 08-A, 09-C, 10-D
11-C, 12-D, 13-B, 14-A, 15-B
16-C, 17-D, 18-D, 19-C, 20-A


 TEXT I:

Clifford the Big Red Dog looks fabulous on an iPad. He sounds good, too — tap the screen and hear him pant as a blue truck roars into the frame. “Go, truck, go!” cheers the narrator. But does this count as story time? Or is it just screen time for babies? It is a question that parents, pediatricians and researchers are struggling to answer as children’s books, just like all the other ones, migrate to digital media.

For years, child development experts have advised parents to read to their children early and often, citing studies showing its linguistic, verbal and social benefits. In June, the American Academy of Pediatrics advised doctors to remind parents at every visit that they should read to their children from birth, prescribing books as enthusiastically as vaccines and vegetables.

On the other hand, the academy strongly recommends no screen time for children under 2, and less than two hours a day for older children.

At a time when reading increasingly means swiping pages on a device, and app stores are bursting with reading programs and learning games aimed at infants and preschoolers, which bit of guidance should parents heed?

The answer, researchers say, is not yet entirely clear. “We know how children learn to read,” said Kyle Snow, the applied research director at the National Association for the Education of Young Children. “But we don’t know how that process will be affected by digital technology.”

Part of the problem is the newness of the devices. Tablets and e-readers have not been in widespread use long enough for the sorts of extended studies that will reveal their effects on learning.

Dr. Pamela High, the pediatrician who wrote the June policy for the pediatrics group, said electronic books were intentionally not addressed. “We tried to do a strongly evidence-based policy statement on the issue of reading starting at a very young age,” she said. “And there isn’t any data, really, on e-books.”

But a handful of new studies suggest that reading to a child from an electronic device undercuts the dynamic that drives language development. “There’s a lot of interaction when you’re reading a book with your child,” Dr. High said. “You’re turning pages, pointing at pictures, talking about the story. Those things are lost somewhat when you’re using an e-book.”

In a 2013 study, researchers found that children ages 3 to 5 whose parents read to them from an electronic book had lower reading comprehension than children whose parents used traditional books. Part of the reason, they said, was that parents and children using an electronic device spent more time focusing on the device itself than on the story (a conclusion shared by at least two other studies).

“Parents were literally putting their hands over the kids’ hands and saying, ‘Wait, don’t press the button yet. Finish this up first,’ ” said Dr. Julia Parish-Morris, a developmental psychologist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the lead author of the 2013 study that was conducted at Temple University. Parents who used conventional books were more likely to engage in what education researchers call “dialogic reading,” the sort of back-and-forth discussion of the story and its relation to the child’s life that research has shown are key to a child’s linguistic development.

Complicating matters is that fewer and fewer children’s e-books can strictly be described as books, say researchers. As technology evolves, publishers are adding bells and whistles that encourage detours. “What we’re really after in reading to our children is behavior that sparks a conversation,” said Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, a professor of psychology at Temple and co-author of the 2013 study. “But if that book has things that disrupt the conversation, like a game plopped right in the middle of the story, then it’s not offering you the same advantages as an old-fashioned book.”

Of course, e-book publishers and app developers point to interactivity as an educational advantage, not a distraction. Many of those bells and whistles — Clifford’s bark, the sleepy narration of “Goodnight Moon,” the appearance of the word “ham” when a child taps the ham in the Green Eggs and Ham app — help the child pick up language, they say.

There is some evidence to bear out those claims, at least in relation to other technologies. A study by the University of Wisconsin in 2013 found that 2-year-olds learned words faster with an interactive app as opposed to one that required no action.

But when it comes to learning language, researchers say, no piece of technology can substitute for a live instructor — even if the child appears to be paying close attention.

Patricia K. Kuhl, a director of the Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences at the University of Washington, led a study in 2003 that compared a group of 9-month-old babies who were addressed in Mandarin by a live instructor with a group addressed in Mandarin by an instructor on a DVD. Children in a third group were exposed only to English.

“The way the kids were staring at the screen, it seemed obvious they would learn better from the DVDs,” she said. But brain scans and language testing revealed that the DVD group “learned absolutely nothing,” Dr. Kuhl said. “Their brain measures looked just like the control group that had just been exposed to English.

The only group that learned was the live social interaction group.” In other words, “it’s being talked with, not being talked at,” that teaches children language, Dr. Hirsh-Pasek said.

Similarly, perhaps the biggest threat posed by e-books that read themselves to children, or engage them with games, is that they could lull parents into abdicating their educational responsibilities, said Mr. Snow of the National Association for the Education of Young Children.

“There’s the possibility for e-books to become the TV babysitters of this generation,” he said. “We don’t want parents to say, ‘There’s no reason for me to sit here and turn pages and tell my child how to read the word, because my iPad can do it.’ ”

But parents may find it difficult to avoid resorting to tablets. Even literacy advocates say the guidelines can be hard to follow, and that allowing limited screen time is not high on the list of parental missteps. “You might have an infant and think you’re down with the A.A.P. guidelines, and you don’t want your baby in front of a screen, but then you have a grandparent on Skype,” Mr. Snow said. “Should you really be tearing yourself apart? Maybe it’s not the world’s worst thing.”

“The issue is when you’re in the other room and Skyping with the baby cause he likes it,” he said. Even if screen time is here to stay as a part of American childhood, good old-fashioned books seem unlikely to disappear anytime soon. Parents note that there is an emotional component to paper-andink storybooks that, so far, does not seem to extend to their electronic counterparts, however engaging.

From: www.nytimes.com, OCT. 11, 2014

01  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

One of the difficulties to determine how digital technologies will affect the reading process is the fact that

A) most parents prefer to use traditional books.
B) no back-and-forth discussion has been made among researchers.
C) there's no data about electronic books to beginning reading at a very young age.
D) many e-books include bells and whistles that distract children's concentration.
 ANSWER (C)

02  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

It is important to note that the academy believes electronic books:

A) are a valuable tool even for toddlers.
B) should not be used by children under two.
C) should be used only when kids are at home.
D) provide an extra educational advantage.
 ANSWER (B)

03  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

According to Dr. Pamela High, a negative aspect of reading to children from electronic devices is the fact that it
A) engages children in 'dialogic reading'.
B) undercuts the dynamic that drives language development.
C) causes lower reading comprehension.
D) has a strong emotional component.
 ANSWER (B)

04  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

It is quite possible that electronic books will turn into the

A) best learning device for the next generation.
B) key to spark a good conversation.
C) biggest threat to children's vision.
D) television babysitters of this generation.
 ANSWER (D)

05  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

In order for a child to learn language, researchers have found that

A) technology should be used on a daily basis.
B) nothing can replace a live instructor.
C) parents should not abdicate their educational responsibilities.
D) DVDs improve the learning process.
 ANSWER (B)

06  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

In relation to the use of electronic reading devices for children, at least three studies share the same findings, stating that.

A) more time is dedicated to the device itself than to the story. B) the reaction of children is always different, making it difficult to reach a conclusion.
C) parents interfere constantly, fragmenting story and thus making it easier for children.
D) such devices account for more ‘dialogic reading’.
 ANSWER (A)

07  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

One point clearly stated in the text refers to the fact that old-fashioned books
A) seem to have a very limited use by children in this century.
B) will probably not disappear in a near future.
C) have shared the same status as e-books in the last few years.
D) will be completely replaced soon without leaving even a trace.
 ANSWER (B)

08  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

When taking their children to a pediatrician, parents, under recommendation of the American Academy of Pediatrics,

A) are reminded to read to their children since the moment they are born.
B) are advised not to use screen devices until children start kindergarten.
C) receive free books to read to their children.
D) get rewarded for reading stories to their toddlers.
 ANSWER (A)

09  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

In the sentence

“Tablets and e-readers have not been in widespread use long enough for the sorts of extended studies that will reveal their effects on learning”,

the pronoun that introduces a/an

A) non-restrictive relative clause.
B) object noun clause.
C) restrictive relative clause.
D) subject noun clause.
 ANSWER (C)

10  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

In the sentence

“He sounds good, too — tap the screen and hear him pant as a blue truck roars into the frame”,

the conjunction as may be replaced by

A) like.
B) nevertheless.
C) however.
D) while.
 ANSWER (D)

11  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

The sentence

“But we don't know how that process will be affected by digital technology”

in the active voice becomes

A) (...) how digital technology affects that process.
B) (...) how digital technology affected that process.
C) (...) how digital technology will affect that process.
D) (...) how digital technology has affected that process.
 ANSWER (C)

12  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

The sentence

“But does this count as story time?”

is

A) compound.
B) complex.
C) compound-complex.
D) simple.
 ANSWER (D)

13  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

In the sentence

“At a time when reading increasingly means swiping pages on a device, and app stores are bursting with reading programs and learning games(...)”,

the underlined verbs are, respectively

A) irregular, irregular, irregular.
B) irregular, regular, irregular.
C) regular, irregular, regular.
D) regular, regular, regular.
 ANSWER (B)

14  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

The sentence

“We know how children learn to read”

contains a/an

A) noun clause.
B) prepositional phrase.
C) adjectival clause.
D) participial phrase.
 ANSWER (A)
➧ In the sentence "We know how children learn to read"(Sabemos como as crianças aprendem a ler), the word HOW works as a NOUN that introduce a subordinate clause, called in this case NOUN CLAUSE.
➧ REMEMBER:  NOUN CLAUSES are subordinate clauses introduced through nouns.
➧ HOW(noun)(way of doing) = o modo de fazer.

15  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

The tenses of the underlined verbs in

“Tablets and e-readers have not been in widespread use long enough for the sorts of extended studies that will reveal their effects on learning”

are

A) simple present and simple future.
B) present perfect simple and simple future.
C) simple present and present perfect simple.
D) present continuous and future perfect.
 ANSWER (B)

16  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

In the sentence

“Those things are lost somewhat when you're using an e-book”

contains a/an

A) adjectival clause.
B) prepositional phrase.
C) adverbial clause.
D) infinitive phrase.
 ANSWER (C)
 In the sentence "Those things are lost somewhat when you're using an e-book"(Essas coisas se perdem um pouco quando você está usando um e-book.), WHEN it is an adverb that introduce a subordinate clause, called in this case ADVERBIAL CLAUSE.
➧ REMEMBER:  ADVERBIAL CLAUSES are subordinate clauses introduced through adverbs.

17  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

In the sentence

“Parents were literally putting their hands over the kids' hands and saying (...)”

the tense of the verbs PUT and SAY is

A) past perfect continuous.
B) simple past.
C) past perfect simple.
D) past continuous.
 ANSWER (D)

18  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

The clause

“(...) when you're using an e-book” in the passive form is

A) when an e-book has to be used (by you).
B) when an e-book must be used (by you).
C) when an e-book is been used (by you).
D) when an e-book is being used (by you).
 ANSWER (D)

19  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

The word READING in the sentences

“At a time when reading increasingly means swiping pages on a device (...), But a handful of new studies suggest that reading to a child from an electronic device (...), and (...) whose parents read to them from an electronic book had lower reading comprehension (...)”

functions, respectively, as

A) noun, noun, adjective.
B) noun, noun, noun.
C) noun, verb, adjective.
D) verb, noun, noun.
 ANSWER (C)

20  (UECE-2015/1-2ª FASE-LÍNGUA INGLESA-VESTIBULAR)

“As technology evolves, publishers are adding bells and whistles that encourage detours”

is an example of

A) complex sentence.
B) simple sentence.
C) compound sentence.
D) compound-complex.
 ANSWER (A)