If you’ve ever finished a Verbal section wondering, “Wait... how did I get that one wrong?”, believe me it's quite common. Verbal can be sneaky. One moment you're feeling good about your RC passage summary, and the next you’re staring at a 50% accuracy thinking maybe it was just bad luck (it wasn’t).
I used to think mastering Verbal was all about reading more, learning a new technique, or watching just one more YouTube video on pre-thinking. But despite all the guides, frameworks, and strategies out there most of which are genuinely solid I often found myself jumping from one method to another like a confused squirrel hoarding tips instead of nuts.
That’s when I realized it wasn’t just about what I was learning, but how I was internalizing it. And more importantly, how I could use a free tool sitting right in front of me - an AI chatbot to turn passive learning into active, interactive study. Not as some magic pill, but as a thinking partner. A relentless devil’s advocate that never gets tired or offended.
Here's one way to optimize your prep using AI, which can help you to:- Spot hidden flaws in your reasoning
- Pre-think better and faster
- Test your logic against a second opinion
- And walk away from every question right or wrong with genuine improvement
If you’re already using AI as a sparring partner for Verbal, you’re ahead of the curve, keep going. But if not, this might be the missing piece in your toolkit. Either way, I’ll break it down section by section (starting with CR and RC), show how to set up the right prompts, and integrate this into your current strategies.
Critical Reasoning: Pre-thinking with a Partner That Doesn’t BlinkLet’s be honest CR is basically an argument with someone invisible. You're told to find flaws, assumptions, and alternate explanations... in 90 seconds... while staying calm and logical. It's like being a courtroom lawyer without the paycheck.
The problem? Most people try to memorize a dozen CR strategies and then freeze mid question wondering which one to apply. I did too. Until I tried something different using AI as my debate partner.
Here’s how I started using an AI assistant to sharpen my pre-thinking and decision making:
Step 1: Read the Question Stem First Always. It tells you what the GMAT wants from you strengthen, weaken, assumption, inference? Knowing this up-front saves precious brain juice.
Step 2: Read the Argument and Pause Before you even glance at the options, give yourself a minute to just... think.
Ask yourself:
- What’s the conclusion?
- What’s the logic (or gap) behind it?
- What possible assumptions or weak links can I imagine?
You might come up with a couple of decent ideas. That’s perfect. This is your raw brain doing the work.
Step 3: Now Ask an AI to Pre-think Type something like: “Here's a GMAT CR argument. I want you to pre-think possible assumptions, alternative explanations, or what might weaken or strengthen the conclusion. Don’t solve just brainstorm.”
You’ll get a list of ideas some sharp, some meh. Compare them to yours. See what you missed or overcomplicated. It’s not about who’s smarter you or the bot it’s about closing the blind spots.
Step 4: Tackle the Options Yourself Armed with your ideas (and a few borrowed from the AI), now look at the choices. Do any of them match what you pre-thought? Does one feel like it nails the assumption or gap you spotted?
Pick your answer before asking the assistant. This forces you to commit and own your logic.
Step 5: Now Debate the Bot Ask the AI to solve it. Great, if it picks the same answer. If not, don’t blindly agree. Ask: “Why do you think this option is better? Here’s my reasoning can you tell me where I’m going wrong?”
You’re training yourself to defend ideas and spot logic flaws not just learning answers, but learning how to think like the test.
And yep, the bot might hallucinate now and then. That’s your cue to flip the roles and teach it what’s actually going on. Breaking down the right logic for your AI sidekick not only fixes the confusion, it makes your own thinking sharper. Nothing locks in a concept like explaining it to someone else... even if that someone lives on a random server somewhere in the cloud.
This whole process might sound long at first, but after 5 to 10 questions, it becomes muscle memory. Your internal dialogue gets sharper. Your accuracy improves. And suddenly, you’re not intimidated by CR you’re playing chess while others are still figuring out how the knight moves.
Reading Comprehension: From Blur to Clarity with a Bit of AI HelpMost of us know that RC isn’t hard because the passages are long. It’s hard because they’re long and intentionally dull. GMAT RC is like trying to stay awake while a Victorian historian, with a monotone voice and zero urgency, explains butterfly migration in 1860s France. The GMAT knows you don’t care. That’s the trap.
Most people read a passage, kind of “get it,” then skim questions hoping something jumps out. Spoiler: that rarely ends well. What helped me was slowing down and using AI to transform passive reading into an active conversation. Here’s the RC method I used:
Step 1: Read the Full Passage Without Fear Yep. All of it. No skimming, no “just look at the first and last lines.” The GMAT is tricky you will miss tone shifts, structural twists, or context setting phrases if you don’t read carefully.
But instead of memorizing, try to build a mental mind map:
- What’s the main point?
- How are the paragraphs connected?
- What’s the author’s tone neutral, skeptical, passionate?
Now, summarize the core idea in few lines. Just for yourself.
Step 2: Use AI for a “Second Read” This is where the magic happens.
Tell your chatbot: “Explain this passage to me line by line in simple terms. Keep it conversational, like you’re teaching someone new.”
You’ll be amazed how often you missed tiny implications, definitions, or context markers. If something still feels fuzzy, stop and ask: “What does this sentence actually mean? Why is it important?”
Sometimes, you don’t even realize which sentence tripped you up until you see it explained differently.
Bonus: If the passage references historical or scientific stuff (like suffrage or entropy), the AI can fill you in with just enough context not a Wikipedia spiral, just a nudge to connect the dots.
Step 3: Answer the Questions Without Returning to the Passage I know, this sounds like jumping out of a plane without Googling “how parachutes work.” But try it.
Why? Because it trains your brain to retain structure and argument flow like muscle memory for comprehension. Go through each question and answer from understanding.
Even if you get one or two wrong, it reveals where your internal map was off.
Step 4: Review Your Mistakes with Curiosity, Not JudgmentNow check your answers and ask:
- Did I misunderstand the passage?
- Did I misread the question?
- Was the wrong choice tempting because of wording?
Then ask the bot:
“Why is option B wrong and D right? Can you explain like I’m five?”
If the answer still doesn’t click, ask again, give your own reasoning why you felt different. Break it down. You’re not bothering anyone as it’s literally built to have infinite patience.
It’s Not About Speed. It’s About Control
Most people struggle with GMAT Verbal not because they’re “bad at English” or “too slow,” but because they don’t feel in control of their process. They know a dozen strategies, but they don’t know which one actually works for them. And when the clock starts ticking, it all goes fuzzy.
So this post is about using what’s already out there - OG content, free strategies, and now, an AI chatbot and turning them into something deeply personal, interactive, and sustainable.
When I started doing this with Critical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension, I realized I wasn’t just learning answers. I was learning to think like the test maker and sometimes argue back when the bot got it wrong. That’s when improvement happened.
You don’t need a $2000 course or a magic framework. You just need to practice like it matters, question things like a skeptic, and reflect like you mean it. And if you’ve got a free assistant who never sleeps and will patiently explain the same argument flaw fifteen different ways (without rolling its eyes even once) just use it.
So go ahead, pull up your OG questions, fire up your AI chatbot, and try it out. You’ll be surprised how much insight you can unlock when your prep stops feeling lonely and starts feeling interactive.
This is a habit. One that takes you from “please be C” to “I know it’s C and here’s why.”
If you’re using a paid version of an AI chatbot, you might notice even better results especially when tackling tougher questions that require more nuanced reasoning or deeper comprehension. The free tools can take you far, but the premium ones sometimes bring a bit more firepower to the table.