Questão de Língua Inglesa — FGV SME-SP EFII e Médio 2023 (nº 37)
Nurturing Multimodalism
[…]
New learning collaborations call on the teacher as learner, and the learner as teacher. The teacher is a lifelong learner; this is simply more apparent in the Information Age. In instances of best practice, collaborative learning partnerships are forged between and among teachers for strategic, bottom-up, in-house professional development. This allows teachers to share in reflective, on-going, contextualized learning, tailored to their collective knowledge. This sharing also includes the learner as teacher. ELT typically employs learner-centered activities: these can include learners sharing their knowledge of strategic digital literacies with others in the classrooms.
The digital universe, so threatening to adult notions of socially sanctioned literacies, is intuitive to children, who have been socialized into it, and for whom digital literacies are exploratory play. Adults may find new ways of communicating digitally to be quite baffling and confronting of our communicative expertise; children do not. Instant messaging systems, such as MSN, AOL, ICQ, for example, provide as natural a medium for communicating to them as telephones did for the baby-boomer generation. It is not fair for the teacher to treat Information and Communication Technologies as auxiliary communication with learners for whom it is mainstream and primary.
Learning spaces are important. Although teachers seldom have much individual say in the layout of teaching spaces, collaborative relationships may help to encourage integrated digitization, where computers are not segregated in laboratories but are interspersed throughout the school environment. In digitally infused curricula, postmodern literacies do not supplant but complement modern literacies, so that access to information is driven by purpose and content rather than by the media available.
In the 2nd paragraph, the pronoun in "Instant messaging systems […] provide as natural a medium for communicating to them" refers to
- Aadults.
- Bteachers.
- Cchildren.
- Dprofessionals.
- Ebaby-boomers.
Resposta comentada
Gabarito Alternativa C
- (A) Incorreta: os adultos são justamente quem acha a comunicação digital "baffling", não o referente de "them".
- (B) Incorreta: os professores não são o referente do pronome nesse trecho.
- (C) Correta: "them" retoma as crianças (children), para quem a mensagem instantânea é meio natural de comunicação.
- (D) Incorreta: "professionals" não é o antecedente do pronome.
- (E) Incorreta: os "baby-boomers" servem de comparação (o telefone para eles), não são o referente de "them".
Fonte: FGV SME-SP EFII e Médio 2023 Inglês (Caderno Tipo 1). Reproduzida para fins de estudo.
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