Course Content
English Grammar Mastery: From Foundations to Fluency

1. Lesson Overview

In this lesson, you will learn when the passive voice should be used and when the active voice is more appropriate.

Although active voice is generally clearer and more direct, passive voice plays an important role in academic writing, scientific reporting, formal communication, and objective descriptions.

Choosing between active and passive voice depends on what information the writer wants to emphasise.

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  • identify situations where passive voice is preferred

  • understand how passive voice improves objectivity in formal writing

  • recognise when active voice is clearer and more effective

  • choose the appropriate voice depending on focus and context


2. Concept Introduction

Consider the following sentences:

The research team analysed the data.
The data were analysed using specialised software.

Sentence Focus
The research team analysed the data. the performer
The data were analysed using specialised software. the process

Both sentences are correct, but they emphasise different elements of the same action.

Active voice focuses on who performs the action, while passive voice focuses on the action or the result.


3. Core Explanation

The choice between active and passive voice depends on sentence focus.

Active Voice

In active voice, the subject performs the action.

Example:

The scientist discovered a new method.

Subject Verb Object
the scientist discovered a new method

Active voice is generally clearer, shorter, and more direct.


Passive Voice

In passive voice, the object becomes the subject, and the performer may be omitted.

Example:

A new method was discovered.

Subject Verb
a new method was discovered

Passive voice emphasises the action or result rather than the performer.


4. Rule Table

Choosing Active vs Passive

Situation Preferred Voice Example
performer is important active The scientist developed the theory.
action/result is important passive The theory was developed in 1915.
performer unknown passive The device was stolen yesterday.
scientific description passive The samples were analysed in the laboratory.

Comparing Active and Passive

Active Voice Passive Voice
The team conducted the experiment. The experiment was conducted by the team.
Researchers analysed the results. The results were analysed by researchers.

5. Usage

1. When the performer is unknown

Example:

The equipment was stolen during the night.

The performer is unknown or irrelevant.


2. When the performer is unimportant

Example:

The road was repaired last week.

The focus is on the repair, not on who repaired it.


3. In scientific and academic writing

Example:

The samples were analysed using advanced instruments.

Scientific writing often emphasises methods and results.


4. When the focus is on the result

Example:

A new vaccine was developed recently.

The emphasis is on the discovery.


5. In formal or official statements

Example:

The decision was announced yesterday.

Passive voice often sounds more formal and objective.


6. Signal Words

Certain expressions often appear in passive constructions describing processes or results.

Expression Example
using The data were analysed using specialised software.
through The results were obtained through careful observation.
during The equipment was damaged during the experiment.
by means of The signal was transmitted by means of radio waves.
with The samples were examined with advanced tools.

These expressions help describe methods and procedures.


7. Special Cases

Overuse of Passive Voice

Although passive voice is useful, excessive use can make writing less clear or indirect.

Weak:

The experiment was conducted and the results were analysed.

Better:

The researchers conducted the experiment and analysed the results.

Active voice is often more concise and easier to understand.


Passive Voice for Objectivity

Passive voice can help remove the personal element from statements.

Example:

Active:

We analysed the data.

Passive:

The data were analysed.

This style is common in scientific writing.


8. Additional Notes

Many modern style guides recommend a balanced use of active and passive voice.

Active voice should be preferred when:

  • the performer is important

  • clarity is required

  • the sentence should be concise

Passive voice should be used when:

  • the performer is unknown

  • the performer is irrelevant

  • the focus is on process or result


9. Common Errors

⚠ Using passive unnecessarily

Weak:
The report was written by the researcher.

Better:

The researcher wrote the report.

Explanation:
Active voice is often clearer and shorter.


⚠ Omitting important agent

Unclear:
The discovery was made.

Clear:

The discovery was made by the research team.

Explanation:
Important information should not be omitted.


⚠ Using passive with intransitive verbs

Incorrect:
The laboratory was arrived by the scientist.

Correct:
The scientist arrived at the laboratory.

Explanation:
Intransitive verbs cannot form passive voice.


⚠ Incorrect passive structure

Incorrect:
The data analysed yesterday.

Correct:
The data were analysed yesterday.

Explanation:
Passive voice requires be + past participle.


⚠ Overusing passive sentences

Weak:
The experiment was conducted and the samples were analysed.

Better:

The researchers conducted the experiment and analysed the samples.

Explanation:
Active voice often improves clarity and readability.


10. Lesson Mastery

After completing this lesson, you should now be able to:

✅ identify situations where passive voice is appropriate
✅ understand how passive voice improves objectivity in formal writing
✅ recognise when active voice is clearer and more effective
✅ choose between active and passive constructions depending on context

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