In this article, we’re going to continue our discussion of best practices for the critical reasoning section of the GMAT exam. You can either read this article or watch this GMAT critical reasoning video on YouTube. To make things easier to digest, we’ve broken the contents of the video up into 3 parts and three different blog posts. In this segment, hosted by one of MyGuru's most experienced GMAT tutors, we will outline the overall steps of the critical reasoning process. In part 1 of this series of articles, we discussed the frequency and format of critical reasoning questions and their strategic implications. In part 2, we worked through examples of inference and argument critical reasoning questions. If you haven’t yet read those, we suggest you go back and make sure you understand them first.
Critical Reasoning Steps
Step 1: Determine the type of question being asked in the critical reasoning prompt, whether it is an argument or inference-style question. This will help guide the evaluation process.
Step 2: Read and make notes on the prompt accordingly. For argument tasks, note the exact conclusion(s) being presented, and for inference tasks, take note of the factual statements provided.
Step 3: For argument tasks only, make a preliminary prediction on what type of answer would address the question being asked, such as strengthening, weakening, identifying flaws, assumptions, evaluating, justifying, etc.
Step 4: Utilize common incorrect answer choices to eliminate potential choices during the evaluation process. Below, we’ve outlined some of the most common elimination tools you can implement for argument and inference tasks respectively.
Elimination Tips
Argument tasks
Common wrong reasons you can use to eliminate answer choices:
Inference tasks
Slightly different wrong reasons you can use to eliminate answer choices:
Conclusion
We hope this overview of the critical reasoning process has demystified the steps necessary to excel on these kinds of questions.