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One of the most common strategies students use for GMAT Critical Reasoning questions is “pre-thinking.” The idea is simple: after reading the passage and question stem, you try to predict what the correct answer will look like before reviewing the answer choices. At first glance, this strategy might seem like an efficient way to save time and sharpen your focus. However, in practice, pre-thinking often does more harm than good.

The problem lies in how the human brain handles uncertainty. Once you make a prediction, even a tentative one, your mind naturally becomes attached to it. This attachment can create what psychologists call confirmation bias—the tendency to look for evidence that supports your initial idea and ignore anything that contradicts it. On the GMAT, this means you might latch onto an answer choice that resembles your pre-thought answer, even if it is logically flawed or incomplete.

The test makers understand this tendency very well. They design answer choices to exploit it. Many incorrect options in Critical Reasoning questions are written to sound plausible to test-takers who rely on pre-thinking. They might use similar wording or familiar concepts from the argument to make the answer feel “right.” The danger is that by trying to guess in advance, you’re effectively working against yourself, increasing the chance of falling for these traps.

At Target Test Prep, we have seen this pattern repeatedly. Students who pre-think are far more likely to select trap answers than those who evaluate all five options objectively. Our data confirms that pre-thinking encourages subjective reasoning rather than analytical thinking, which is exactly the opposite of what the GMAT tests. To help students avoid this pitfall, we deliberately include similar traps in our practice materials, teaching them to recognize when their minds are steering them toward a biased conclusion.

So, what should you do instead? The most effective approach is to engage directly with the answer choices. Read the passage carefully, identify the argument’s structure and key assumption, and then go straight to the answer options. Evaluate each choice on its logical merits and eliminate those that do not satisfy the question’s requirements. This process keeps you grounded in the logic of the argument rather than in your assumptions.

Skipping the pre-thinking step also helps with time management. Trying to predict an answer before you have all the information forces your brain to juggle two tasks at once—holding on to your prediction while evaluating the actual options. This mental multitasking slows you down and increases the risk of missing key details. By focusing solely on the provided choices, you reduce cognitive load and make clearer, faster decisions.

It is worth remembering that the GMAT does not reward guessing or intuition; it rewards reasoning. Every Critical Reasoning question is designed to test your ability to analyze arguments systematically and identify logical connections. Pre-thinking may feel proactive, but it moves you away from that goal.

On test day, resist the urge to guess before you evaluate. Keep your thinking objective and grounded in logic. The more you train yourself to work directly with what is in front of you, the more consistently you will choose the correct answers. Over time, this disciplined approach will lead to higher accuracy, better pacing, and stronger overall performance on the Verbal section.

Reach out to me with any questions about your GMAT prep. Happy studying!

Warmest regards,

Scott Woodbury-Stewart
Founder & CEO, Target Test Prep

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