Why Doing Hundreds of GMAT Verbal Questions Won’t Automatically Improve Your Score
Many GMAT students approach Verbal preparation with good intentions but an ineffective strategy. A common pattern looks like this: a student sets a timer, answers a couple dozen Official Guide Verbal questions, scores poorly, and then reads the explanations to see what went wrong. I have spoken with students who have completed hundreds of questions using this exact approach and were surprised when their Verbal scores barely moved.
The underlying issue is that many test-takers, especially native English speakers, underestimate the rigor of the Verbal section. They assume that familiarity with the English language will carry them on test day and that simply doing more questions will lead to improvement. The GMAT, however, does not reward casual familiarity. Increasing a Verbal score by even a few points requires targeted skill development, not volume alone.
If your baseline Verbal performance is already near your goal, completing sets of practice questions might be enough to refine your skills. For most students, though, that is not the case. Solving question after question without a structured plan does not build the essential reasoning abilities that the GMAT evaluates. You will not absorb the full set of concepts and strategies required for success simply by reading explanations after you get a question wrong.
Think of it this way: working through large numbers of questions without first mastering the fundamentals is like hitting golf balls at the driving range without learning proper grip, stance, and swing mechanics. You are practicing, but you are not improving the right skills. In fact, you may reinforce counterproductive habits that become harder to break later.
Another limitation of the “read the solution and move on” approach is that it does not ensure retention. When you review an explanation, you understand what should have been done in that specific moment. Yet, in most cases, you move immediately to a new question that tests different ideas. By the time you encounter another example of the original concept, you may not recall or apply what you learned. Understanding an explanation is not the same as performing the steps yourself in real time.
True progress in GMAT Verbal requires focused learning. You must take the time to understand the logic, the frameworks, and the patterns that drive correct answers across question types. Once that foundation is secure, practice questions reinforce and strengthen your skills. Without that foundation, practice becomes repetition rather than growth.
If you want meaningful score improvement, build knowledge first, then practice deliberately. It is a slower start, but it creates the kind of performance breakthrough that mass drilling on its own rarely produces.
Reach out to me with any questions about your GMAT prep. Happy studying!
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep