What are the best resources to improve my GMAT Verbal score?

Asked by Subhash M about 1 month ago

4 Answers

Improving your GMAT Verbal score in the Focus Edition means getting better at just two things , Critical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension. Both require a mix of strategy, logic, and reading habits.

For Critical Reasoning, use the Powerscore Critical Reasoning Bible. It helps break down arguments into structure, assumptions, and flaws — which is key for GMAT-style questions. Pair it with the Target Test Prep Verbal course, which offers concept-wise practice with timed drills and error analysis built in.

For Reading Comprehension, begin with one passage per day from the GMAT Official Guide 2025. Focus on identifying the main point, tone, and paragraph structure. Add short editorial reading (like The Economist or The Hindu) and summarize in 2–3 lines to build mental structure.

Finish with official mocks and Mentr Me’s Verbal sets. Review mistakes by tagging question types,  it shows you where to improve, not just what you got wrong.


upvote icon
Upvote6
Comment
0
Share

public user

Preet J

Education consultant | Expertise in Client Relationship Management & Business Development | Driving Revenue Growth

Used a mix of strategy-based and concept-building resources to improve GMAT Verbal:

  • E-GMAT Verbal course – Focused on sentence correction logic, critical reasoning structures, and verbal pacing techniques tailored for non-native speakers.
  • Manhattan Prep Verbal books – Especially helpful for sentence correction patterns and logical reasoning explanations.
  • Mentr Me Verbal question sets – Practiced daily with difficulty-based sets and used their RC passages for time-bound drills.
  • GMAT Focus Edition Official Guide 2025 – Solved 10–15 verbal questions per day and kept an error log to review grammar traps and argument flaws.

Instead of spreading out too many resources, revisited each question I got wrong, rewrote it, and tracked weak concepts weekly. That helped build accuracy and retention.


upvote icon
Upvote6
Comment
0
Share

public user

V Ritik

Dynamic Business Analyst | Data-Driven Decision Maker | Strategic Thinker

If your Verbal score isn’t improving, the problem usually isn’t your effort—it’s your approach. The best resources help you build pattern recognition and decision-making under time pressure. Here’s what actually works for GMAT Focus Verbal:

Critical Reasoning: Use GMAT Ninja’s free YouTube videos. After each video, practice 10 CR questions and explain why each incorrect option is wrong—not just why the right one works. That reflection builds accuracy.

Reading Comprehension: Focus on structure, not speed. LSAT RC passages (especially from RC99 or LSAT Demon) are great for advanced practice. Summarize each paragraph briefly to improve navigation during questions.

Official Practice: Use OG Verbal Review and GMAT Club’s question filters to drill CR and RC by type (e.g., weaken, inference, tone). Don’t mix difficulty levels blindly—start with medium questions.

Mentr Me Resources: Visit Mentr Me’s GMAT resources for clean, topic-wise Verbal worksheets and RC strategy guides. They’re especially helpful for final-month revision and focused prep.


upvote icon
Upvote3
Comment
0
Share

public user

Aarushi S

Digital Marketer

For GMAT Verbal, the best resources are those that help you think like the test—not just memorize theory. GMAT Focus rewards clarity, logic, and structure. Here’s what actually helps:

Critical Reasoning: Start with the Powerscore CR Bible if you’re a beginner, but for deeper accuracy, switch to GMAT Ninja’s YouTube CR videos. They break down logic in a way that helps you avoid common traps. Focus especially on assumption, weaken, and inference questions—those make up most of the test.

Reading Comprehension: Use LSAT RC passages (like RC99 or LSAT Demon) to build endurance and inference skills. If OG passages feel easy, these will stretch your understanding. Pay attention to structure—intro, opinion, contrast—not details.

Practice Filtering: Use GMAT Club’s filters to drill CR and RC by question type. This helps identify patterns in what you keep getting wrong.

Mentr Me: Check out Mentr Me’s GMAT resources for week-by-week Verbal plans, curated RC notes, and strategy templates from 700+ scorers. They cut down trial and error.


upvote icon
Upvote0
Comment
0
Share

public user

Ready to Ace the GMAT?

Get 7 Days of Free Access!

banner-image

Start your FREE Trial NOW to get:

  • 🎥100+ Video Lessons
  • 📚2000+ Practice Questions
  • 📝Target Mocks & Sectional Tests