Why Doing More GMAT Verbal Questions Is Not the Solution
A common but ineffective Verbal prep strategy looks like this: a student answers dozens of GMAT Verbal questions under timed conditions, gets many of them wrong, reads the explanations, and moves on. This cycle is repeated over and over. Despite this effort, the Verbal score does not improve.
Why does this happen?
Often, the student is simply going through the motions without addressing the core issue. Many test-takers, especially native English speakers, assume that because they speak the language fluently, they will naturally do well on Verbal. As a result, they underestimate the depth of reasoning the GMAT requires. But GMAT Verbal is not a vocabulary or grammar test. It is a reasoning test. And reasoning must be trained.
The mistake is focusing on volume over depth. Doing 50 questions a day without understanding the concepts behind them is no different from repeating a flawed golf swing at the driving range. Repetition without correction only reinforces the wrong habits.
To make your Verbal prep more effective, try the following approach:
1. Pause the timer. In the early phases of your prep, do not worry about timing. Your first priority should be building skill and accuracy. Only introduce time constraints after your performance becomes consistent.
2. Study by topic. Instead of jumping into mixed sets, focus on mastering one Verbal topic at a time, such as Strengthen questions or Logical Inference. Work on 10 to 15 questions from that specific type until your accuracy improves.
3. Analyze every answer choice. For each question you complete, explain in writing why every answer choice is correct or incorrect. Treat each explanation as a mini exercise in logic.
4. Reattempt missed questions. Do not just read the explanation. Try the question again a day or two later, without referring to the answer. This will show you whether you truly understood the logic or just followed the explanation.
5. Track your reasoning errors. Create an
error log. For each missed question, document the reasoning error that led you astray. Were you misled by extreme language? Did you rely on gut instinct rather than analyzing the argument? Use this log to adjust your approach.
6. Build a review system. Each week, review 15 to 20 Verbal questions you previously completed. Revisit the ones you missed. This will reinforce the right patterns of thinking.
7. Limit passive reading. Reading an explanation and thinking “that makes sense” is not enough. Unless you actively practice the reasoning, the improvement will be superficial.
By following these steps, you are not only practicing GMAT Verbal, you are learning how to reason at a higher level. That is what will lead to measurable score gains.
Reach out to me with any questions about your GMAT prep. Happy studying!
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep