Why Staying with Hard Questions Boosts GMAT Verbal Performance
One of the most underrated skills in GMAT Verbal preparation is the ability to persist through mental discomfort. Most students underestimate how much determination it takes to find correct answers consistently. They focus on understanding logic, reasoning, and comprehension, but often overlook the mental side of performance. Cultivating the will to stay engaged when questions feel challenging can raise your Verbal score more than any single content strategy.
When you encounter a Verbal question that feels confusing or difficult, your instinct may be to move on quickly. You might think, “This is too hard,” or assume you do not understand it. But that moment of discomfort is not a signal to stop. It is an opportunity to train your reasoning skills. If you remain calm and methodical, even when your understanding is uncertain, you will build the mental stamina that separates average performers from top scorers.
Repeatedly engaging with difficult Reading Comprehension passages or complex Critical Reasoning questions strengthens your focus and ability to reason under pressure. Each time you resist the urge to guess or skip a question and instead work through the logic carefully, you reinforce your capacity to think clearly. Over time, questions that once seemed overwhelming will feel manageable and familiar.
Research supports this approach. Studies show that how we interpret struggle affects performance. Students who see difficulty as a natural part of growth perform better than those who view it as a sign of weakness. Developing this mindset, often called grit, is a strong predictor of improvement on the GMAT.
If your goal is to improve your Verbal score, practice staying with challenging problems. Do not rush, do not panic, and do not equate confusion with failure. Instead, see each challenging moment as an opportunity to expand your reasoning ability. Over time, this perseverance will lead to sharper focus, stronger comprehension, and higher scores.
Discomfort is not a barrier to success on the GMAT Verbal. It is part of the process of achieving it.
Reach out to me with any questions about your GMAT prep. Happy studying!
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep