The Word-Match Trap That Costs Points in GMAT RC
GMAT Reading Comprehension is less about spotting familiar phrases and more about understanding ideas. Yet many students unknowingly hurt their accuracy by treating RC like a word-matching exercise. When an answer choice repeats language from the passage, it feels safe. When it uses new wording, it feels risky. That instinct is exactly what the test exploits.
Strong RC performance comes from judging answers by what they mean, not how closely they resemble the text.
What You Should Focus OnAs you evaluate answer choices, ask a simple question: Does this statement accurately reflect the author’s idea or logic? The correct answer often restates the passage in a new way. If the meanings align, differences in wording are irrelevant.
What to AvoidDo not automatically reject an answer because it does not reuse the passage’s language. At the same time, do not reward an answer just because it sounds familiar. The GMAT frequently uses recycled wording to disguise incorrect ideas, counting on you to confuse recognition with understanding.
Why This Trap Is So EffectiveTest writers intentionally craft wrong answers that echo key terms from the passage but subtly shift the meaning. These choices feel comfortable because they look like something you just read. Meanwhile, the correct answer may feel less obvious because it conveys the idea rather than copying it.
IllustrationImagine a passage mentions a specialized clock used for scientific research in a remote location.
- A misleading answer might repeat the exact description of the clock and its location.
- A correct answer might describe it more generally as a highly precise device positioned far from the researchers.
The second option captures the underlying idea, even though it avoids the original phrasing. The first option relies on familiarity rather than accuracy.
How to Break the Word-Matching Habit- Read for Ideas, Not Phrases: Focus on what the author is arguing or explaining, not the specific language used.
- Translate Before You Evaluate: Put the passage or relevant sentence into your own words before looking at the options.
- Be Comfortable With New Language: Different wording does not mean different meaning. In fact, it is often a sign of the correct answer.
- Use Logic as Your Filter: If an answer adds extremes, twists the idea, or goes beyond what was stated, eliminate it, even if it sounds similar to the passage.
GMAT Reading Comprehension rewards interpretation, not memorization. When you stop chasing exact phrasing and start evaluating meaning, trap answers lose their power. Train yourself to think in ideas, and your RC accuracy will improve naturally.
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep