What You’ll Learn
π« The Myth
“A proper conclusion must summarize all the main points you made in the essay. Restate your thesis, briefly mention each argument, and end with a final statement. This shows the evaluator you have a clear structure and helps them remember your key points.”
Candidates write conclusions like: “In conclusion, this essay discussed how [Point 1], [Point 2], and [Point 3]. Therefore, [restated thesis].” They spend 40-60 words repeating what they just said in the previous 250 wordsβwords that could have been used to add new insight. The result? A conclusion that adds zero value and makes the essay feel repetitive.
π€ Why People Believe It
This myth persists for understandable reasons:
1. Academic Essay Training
In school and college, we wrote 1,500+ word essays. Summarizing made senseβthe reader might have forgotten points from pages ago. Teachers graded on “complete structure” including a summary conclusion.
2. The “Tell Them Three Times” Rule
Presentation advice says: “Tell them what you’ll say, say it, tell them what you said.” This works for 30-minute presentations. It’s absurd for 300-word essays the evaluator reads in 90 seconds.
3. Fear of “Incomplete” Essays
Without a summary, candidates worry the essay feels unfinished. “What if the evaluator missed something?” But in a 300-word essay, nothing is far away. The evaluator just read your points 30 seconds ago.
4. Template Addiction
Coaching templates include: “Conclusion: Restate thesis + summarize points + final thought.” Following the template feels safe. But the template was designed for longer essays.
β The Reality: Synthesis Beats Summary in Short Essays
Here’s why summary conclusions fail in WAT:
Summary vs. Synthesis: The Critical Difference
- Restates thesis in different words
- Lists the main points again
- Reminds reader of arguments they just read
- Ends where you started
- Zero new information
- Feels repetitive
- Wastes 40-60 words
- Signals template thinking
- Draws insight FROM your points
- Shows implications or consequences
- Connects to broader context
- Ends BEYOND where you started
- New insight emerges
- Shows deeper thinking
- Uses words effectively
- Leaves strong final impression
Real Examples: Same Essay, Different Conclusions
Topic: “Should India adopt a uniform civil code?”
Essay body argued: (1) Legal consistency benefits, (2) Cultural diversity concerns, (3) Implementation challenges
Another Example: Economic Topic
Topic: “Should India prioritize GDP growth or income equality?”
β οΈ The Impact: How Summary Conclusions Hurt Your Score
| Aspect | Summary Conclusion | Synthesis Conclusion |
|---|---|---|
| Word economy | 40-60 words repeating information; could have added new content | 40-60 words adding insight; every word earns its place |
| Final impression | “Template follower” β essay ends with a whimper | “Original thinker” β essay ends with memorable insight |
| Depth perception | Suggests surface-level engagement with topic | Demonstrates deeper reflection and analysis |
| Differentiation | Sounds like 100 other essays with same structure | Stands out with unique perspective or framing |
| Evaluator engagement | Evaluator skimsβthey know what’s coming | Evaluator reads carefullyβnew content to evaluate |
These phrases signal a summary conclusion that adds nothing:
π΄ “In conclusion, this essay discussed/examined/analyzed…”
π΄ “To sum up / To summarize / In summary…”
π΄ “As discussed above / As mentioned earlier…”
π΄ “While there are valid arguments on both sides…”
π΄ “A balanced approach is needed…”
π΄ “Therefore, it can be concluded that…”
π΄ “All things considered / Taking everything into account…”
The test: Could this conclusion be copy-pasted onto a different essay about a different topic? If yes, it’s too generic. Your conclusion should only make sense for YOUR specific argument.
The Recency Effect You’re Wasting
Psychology research shows people remember the last thing they read most vividly (the “recency effect”). Your conclusion is the last impression you make.
With a summary conclusion: The evaluator’s final thought is “yes, I just read that”βmild boredom
With a synthesis conclusion: The evaluator’s final thought is “that’s an interesting point”βpositive impression
You’re spending 40-60 words on the most memorable part of your essay. Why waste them on repetition? Use that prime real estate for your best insight, your most memorable phrase, your strongest thought. End on a high note, not a recap.
π‘ What Actually Works: Five Types of Effective Conclusions
Instead of summarizing, try one of these synthesis approaches:
Structure: “If [your argument] is true, then [implication]…”
Example: “If remote work becomes permanent, the real disruption won’t be to offices but to citiesβas talent distributes geographically, economic power will follow.”
Why it works: Shows you’ve thought beyond the immediate question to broader implications
Structure: “The real question isn’t [original question] but [better question]…”
Example: “The debate over AI replacing jobs misses the point. The real question is who will own the AI that does the replacingβand whether the benefits will be shared.”
Why it works: Demonstrates sophisticated thinking that goes beyond the obvious framing
Structure: “[Point 1] and [Point 2] together suggest [new insight]…”
Example: “Manufacturing creates jobs but requires infrastructure; services grow faster but need skilled talent. The common thread? India’s development bottleneck isn’t sector choiceβit’s human capital investment.”
Why it works: Shows you can connect ideas to reach conclusions not stated in the body
Structure: “Looking ahead, [future development or trend]…”
Example: “Within a decade, the privacy debate will shift from ‘should we protect data’ to ‘can we even define what personal data means’ as AI generates synthetic information indistinguishable from real.”
Why it works: Shows forward thinking and awareness of how issues evolve
Structure: Build to a punchy final sentence that captures your argument
Examples:
β’ “The goal isn’t uniformity; it’s justice.”
β’ “We don’t need less technologyβwe need better humans.”
β’ “The best time to prepare was yesterday. The second best time is now.”
Why it works: Leaves a lasting impression; evaluator remembers your essay
The Conclusion Formula
Sentence 1 (15-20 words): Synthesis insight OR implication OR reframe
Sentence 2 (15-20 words): Develop or support that insight
Sentence 3 (10-15 words): Memorable closing line (optional but powerful)
What NOT to include:
β “In conclusion” / “To sum up” (unnecessaryβreader knows it’s the end)
β Restating your thesis (they just read it)
β Listing your points again (they just read them)
β “Both sides have merit” (says nothing)
β “A balanced approach is needed” (generic filler)
Before & After: Transforming Summary into Synthesis
| Topic | Summary Version | Synthesis Version |
|---|---|---|
| Online education | “In conclusion, online education has both advantages like flexibility and disadvantages like lack of interaction. A hybrid approach would be best.” | “Online education’s real impact isn’t replacing classroomsβit’s democratizing access. A student in rural Bihar can now learn from MIT. The question isn’t online vs. offline; it’s who gets left out of the digital shift.” |
| Social media regulation | “To summarize, while social media has benefits, it also has harms. Government regulation with industry cooperation is needed for responsible use.” | “Regulating social media is like regulating conversationβtechnically possible but philosophically fraught. The better path may be platform design that makes manipulation harder and nuance easier. Change the architecture, not just the rules.” |
| Work-life balance | “This essay discussed the importance of work-life balance. Both career success and personal well-being matter. Finding the right balance is essential for a fulfilling life.” | “The very phrase ‘work-life balance’ assumes work isn’t part of lifeβa telling symptom of how we’ve structured modern employment. Perhaps the goal isn’t balance but integration: work that doesn’t require escaping from.” |
After writing your essay, try this:
1. Cover your body paragraphs
2. Read ONLY your conclusion
3. Ask: “Does this teach me something, or just remind me of something?”
If it teaches something new β Good synthesis conclusion
If it just reminds/summarizes β Rewrite with one of the five approaches above
A strong conclusion should be able to stand somewhat on its own. It should contain an insight worth reading even if you hadn’t read the rest of the essay. That’s the standard to aim for.
π― Self-Check: Are Your Conclusions Adding Value?
In a 300-word essay, summary conclusions waste precious words and add zero valueβthe evaluator just read your points 30 seconds ago. Synthesis conclusions, on the other hand, elevate your essay by drawing implications, reframing questions, or offering memorable insights. The test: “If I covered the body and read only my conclusion, would I learn something new?” Strong conclusions pass this test; summaries fail it. Your conclusion is prime real estateβthe last impression you make. Don’t waste it saying “As discussed above, Point 1 and Point 2…” Instead, tell the evaluator something that makes them think “that’s a good point.” Five approaches that work: the “So What?” implication, the reframe, the synthesis insight, the future look, or the memorable closing line. Try writing your conclusion FIRSTβknow your destination before you write the journey. End on your best thought, not a recap.