The way the Official Guide to the GMAT, and too many GMAT tutors for that matter, explains how to answer GMAT sentence correction questions is overly confusing. The explanations are far too technical. You are taking the GMAT to get into an MBA program. The MBA programs wants to ensure you can read, write, and speak English well. Neither you nor the MBA program should be concerned with PhD level technical elements of the English language. In this article we’ll teach you how to correctly answer GMAT sentence correction questions by following a four-step process.
But before we jump in, let’s set some context about GMAT sentence correction questions.
You will be presented with a single sentence with an underlined portion to evaluate. The non-underlined portion of the original sentence is assumed to be correct as written. Choice A is always same as underlined as presented in original (remember this to save time!). Choice A is correct as frequently as any other choice is correct. Choices B through E present varying alternatives for the underlined portion.
You can expect to see a fair number of Sentence Correction questions. They will not be the least frequent, though they are also unlikely to clearly be the most frequent. Typically, you’ll see as many Sentence Correction questions as you see Reading Comprehension questions. You’ll usually see 2-3 more Sentence Corrections than Critical Reasoning.
Given the above, plan to spend approximately 1:30 per Sentence Correction question, on average. Your max should be 2:00 for any one question. If you aren’t sure what the right answer is, re-read only once before eliminating and guessing to save time. Consider skipping proactively if you cannot fully understand the sentence as currently written.
How do you answer GMAT Sentence Correction questions correctly?
You can employ a four-step process to answer most GMAT Sentence Correction questions correctly.
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
Step 4
The three types of errors below are quite common. Aggressively seek these errors in every sentence and every choice.
Subject verb agreement
Verb tenses
Pronouns and articles
The three errors below are also somewhat common. Ensure certainty with these errors to evaluate every choice.
Modifier absurdity
Parallelism and comparison
Common GMAT idioms
Any GMAT course or online GMAT verbal tutor who presents a GMAT Sentence Correction study plan that involves learning about logical predication or future perfect progressives for their own sake is likely leading you down an unhelpful path. Keep the four-step process and common errors above in mind when attacking the GMAT Sentence Correction question type.Visit our Youtube channel to view the entire Sentence Correction powerpoint presentation.