One of the most common mistakes students make in GMAT Verbal prep is relying on volume over intention. A typical routine looks like this: answer a set of Official Guide Verbal questions under timed conditions, then review only the ones answered incorrectly. Many students repeat this cycle endlessly, yet see little to no movement in their Verbal scores.
The problem is not effort. It is a misunderstanding of what the GMAT Verbal section actually demands. Even strong English speakers often assume that exposure alone will lead to improvement. But GMAT Verbal is not a test you can brute force. Meaningful score gains require a deep understanding of how the test works, including the logic behind correct answers, the patterns in trap choices, and the strategies that guide efficient reasoning. These skills do not develop automatically just by answering more questions.
When foundational Verbal strategies are missing, practice questions become a blunt tool. You may be investing time, but the return is minimal. It is no different from practicing a sport without learning proper technique. You risk ingraining bad habits rather than improving performance.
Another key issue is passive review. Reading an explanation after getting a question wrong does not guarantee that the lesson sticks. Too often, students immediately move on to a new question type that requires a different skill set, without actively applying what they just learned. By the time a similar concept appears again, the insight has faded. This breaks the continuity needed to build reliable, repeatable problem solving habits.
The lesson is simple but critical. GMAT Verbal improvement starts with learning before grinding. Concepts, strategies, and reasoning frameworks must come first. Practice questions should be used to reinforce and refine those skills, not to replace the learning process itself. Build the foundation, apply it deliberately, and repeat with structure. That is how consistent, measurable progress is made.
If you have questions about how to structure your GMAT Verbal prep more effectively, feel free to reach out. Happy studying.
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep