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C2 · Unit 1
Register control · tone across genres
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Register Control

In C2, “good English” isn’t enough—students must select the right English for the context. This unit trains deliberate control of tone, formality, stance, and rhetorical style across genres: email, briefing, editorial, and academic writing.

Objectives What is Register? Signals Genre Targets Rewrite Toolkit Practice Final Task Materials

SWBAT (Objectives)

  • Diagnose register: identify tone, stance, and audience expectations in a text.
  • Rewrite the same message into 4 genres (email, briefing, editorial, academic) without changing meaning.
  • Control formality using lexis, grammar, and rhetorical moves (hedging, emphasis, directness).
  • Avoid register errors (too casual, too aggressive, too vague, overly academic, etc.).
  • Edit for precision: reduce ambiguity, improve clarity, and maintain consistent voice.

What is Register?

Register = context choices

Register is the “setting” of language: how you adapt vocabulary, grammar, politeness, and structure to match audience, purpose, and genre.

C2 skill focus

You can switch voice quickly and deliberately—without sounding unnatural or inconsistent— and you can justify your choices (“Why this tone here?”).

Same idea, different register:

Email (neutral): “Could you share the latest figures by Thursday so we can finalize the report?”
Briefing (direct): “We need the updated figures by Thursday to finalize the report.”
Editorial (persuasive): “Without timely reporting, decisions are made in the dark—updated figures must arrive by Thursday.”
Academic (measured): “To enable completion of the report, updated figures are required by Thursday.”
Register Basics (PDF) Tone Spectrum (PDF)

Register Signals (What Creates Tone?)

Lexis (word choice)

fix → resolve · help → assist · big → substantial
kid → child · job → position

Grammar & stance

direct vs hedged (“must” vs “may”) · active vs passive · modals · nominalisation

Politeness & interpersonal moves

greetings/closings · softeners (“just”, “a bit”) · gratitude · face-saving

Structure

paragraphing · headings · bullet points · signposting · call-to-action placement

Register Signals Checklist (PDF)

Genre Targets (Email · Briefing · Editorial · Academic)

Email (workplace)
  • Clear subject + purpose
  • Polite directness (“Could you…?”)
  • Action items + deadlines
  • Warm, professional closing
Briefing (executive)
  • Top-line summary first
  • Bullets, headings, numbers
  • Risks + recommendation
  • Neutral, efficient tone
Editorial (persuasive)
  • Strong thesis + urgency
  • Rhetorical devices (contrast, parallelism)
  • Counterargument + rebuttal
  • Call to action
Academic (measured)
  • Hedging + cautious claims
  • Precise definitions
  • Evidence + citation language
  • Objective tone (avoid loaded language)
Genre Templates (PDF) Model Texts (PDF)

Rewrite Toolkit (How to Switch Register)

1) Decide the audience & goal

Who reads it? What do they need? What action should happen next?

2) Choose stance level

assertive · neutral · cautious · persuasive

3) Swap lexis & grammar

add hedging (may/tends to) · nominalise · adjust directness (could/please) · change structure

Quick “dial” (informal → formal):
a lot → a considerable amount · get → obtain · talk about → discuss · deal with → address · fix → remedy
Rewrite Toolkit (PDF) Formality Dials (PDF)

Practice (Tone Switching Drills)

Practice 1: Diagnose

Label tone (neutral/persuasive/cautious/direct). Identify 3 signals causing that tone.

Practice 2: Same message, 4 genres

Rewrite a 70–90 word message as: email, briefing bullets, editorial paragraph, academic paragraph.

Practice 3: Register repair

Fix “register breaks” (too casual, too emotional, too vague, too academic). Keep meaning.

Practice Worksheet (PDF) Register Repair Drills (PDF)

Final Task: Register Portfolio (4 Pieces)

Prompt (same content for all)

You are communicating a workplace / public issue (teacher provides scenario). The facts must remain consistent.

Deliverables
  • Email (120–160 words)
  • Briefing note (bullets + recommendation)
  • Editorial paragraph (150–220 words)
  • Academic paragraph (150–220 words, cautious)
Success criteria
  • Audience-appropriate tone in each genre
  • No register breaks (slang, mismatch, over-hedging)
  • Clear structure & signposting
  • Precision: minimal ambiguity
  • Consistency of facts across versions
Portfolio Template (PDF) Rubric (PDF)

Materials & Downloads

  • Unit 1 Slides — PPTX
  • Register Basics — PDF · Tone Spectrum — PDF
  • Register Signals Checklist — PDF
  • Genre Templates — PDF · Model Texts — PDF
  • Rewrite Toolkit — PDF · Formality Dials — PDF
  • Practice Worksheet — PDF · Register Repair Drills — PDF
  • Portfolio Template — PDF · Rubric — PDF

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