GoKelisi logo
C2 · Unit 7
Advanced writing · revision & style control
Back to C2 Program Next Unit →

Advanced Writing

C2 writers can shift genre instantly: research abstract, business executive summary, or publication-ready text aligned to a style guide. This unit builds the habits of professional revision: purpose-first structure, tight wording, and consistent formatting.

Objectives Genres Abstracts Executive Summaries Style Guides Revision Workflow Practice Final Task Materials

SWBAT (Objectives)

  • Differentiate the purpose and structure of an abstract vs an executive summary.
  • Write a clear abstract (150–250 words) using a standard academic structure.
  • Write an executive summary (180–300 words) with outcomes, recommendations, and next steps.
  • Apply a style guide consistently (tone, headings, numbers, citations, punctuation).
  • Revise writing for publishable clarity: concision, precision, coherence, and formatting.

Genres (What Changes, What Stays)

Abstract (academic)

Summarizes a study: purpose → method → key results → implications. No “sales” tone.

Executive summary (professional)

Summarizes a decision document: problem → key findings → recommendation → risks → next steps.

Style guide (publication rules)

Controls tone, formatting, punctuation, numbers, citations, headings, and terminology consistency.

Genre Comparison Sheet (PDF)

Abstracts (150–250 words)

Standard structure
  1. Context / problem (1–2 sentences)
  2. Aim (what this paper/study does)
  3. Method (data, design, sample)
  4. Results (most important findings)
  5. Conclusion / implications (meaning, limitation)
Abstract language

“This paper examines…” · “We analyze…” · “Findings indicate…” · “Results suggest…”
“A limitation is…” · “These results may inform…”

Common C2 pitfall: too many details. Abstracts prioritize the “skeleton,” not every bone.
Abstract Templates (PDF) Abstract Samples (PDF)

Executive Summaries (180–300 words)

Required elements
  • Decision context / goal
  • Key findings (2–4 bullets)
  • Recommendation (clear, actionable)
  • Risks / trade-offs + mitigation
  • Next steps + timeline/owner (if known)
Executive language

“We recommend…” · “The preferred option is…” · “Key benefits include…”
“Primary risks are…” · “To mitigate…” · “Next, we will…”

Style rule

Busy readers: lead with the recommendation, then justify. Use headings and bullets where appropriate.

Exec Summary Template (PDF) Exec Summary Samples (PDF)

Style Guides (Consistency = Credibility)

What style guides control
  • Headings and hierarchy
  • Numbers, dates, units
  • Citations and references
  • Punctuation norms
  • Terminology consistency
House style (class style guide)

Students will apply a simple class style guide: tone, sentence length targets, headings, bullet rules, and “forbidden vague words” list.

Professional tip

Style consistency reduces reader effort—and makes your argument feel more trustworthy.

Class Style Guide (PDF) Style Checklist (PDF)

Revision Workflow (How Professionals Revise)

Pass 1: Purpose

Does every sentence serve the genre goal (inform / decide / persuade)? Delete or reframe anything that doesn’t.

Pass 2: Structure

Strong headings, logical flow, clean paragraph roles (claim → support → implication).

Pass 3: Style & polish

Tight verbs, remove vagueness, improve coherence, apply the style guide consistently.

Revision Workflow Sheet (PDF)

Practice (Writing + Revision)

Practice 1: Abstract compression

Turn a 400-word overview into a 200-word abstract (keep aim, method, results, implications).

Practice 2: Executive summary rewrite

Lead with recommendation, add risks, and format with headings + bullets for a busy reader.

Practice 3: Style-guide compliance

Fix numbering, terminology, headings, and punctuation to match the class style guide.

Practice Worksheet (PDF) Answer Key (PDF)

Final Task: Dual-Genre Portfolio

Part A — Abstract
  • Write a 170–230 word abstract from a provided report/article.
  • Include aim, method (if applicable), results, and implications.
  • No promotional tone; precision + restraint.
Part B — Executive summary
  • Write a 200–300 word executive summary for a decision-maker.
  • Lead with recommendation; include risks + mitigation; next steps.
  • Use headings/bullets where appropriate.
Part C — Style compliance
  • Revise both pieces to match the class style guide.
  • Submit a short “revision log” listing 6 key changes and why.
Task Sheet (PDF) Rubric (PDF)

Materials & Downloads

  • Unit 7 Slides — PPTX
  • Genre Comparison Sheet — PDF
  • Abstract Templates — PDF · Abstract Samples — PDF
  • Exec Summary Template — PDF · Exec Summary Samples — PDF
  • Class Style Guide — PDF · Style Checklist — PDF
  • Revision Workflow Sheet — PDF
  • Practice Worksheet — PDF · Answer Key — PDF
  • Task Sheet — PDF · Rubric — PDF

Swap placeholders with real file paths. Keep links consistent: /levels/c2/assets/.