GMAT · Verbal — Critical Reasoning · Philippines
Verbal — Critical Reasoning for the GMAT Exam — Filipino candidates
12% of the GMAT test plan. Evaluating arguments — strengthening, weakening, finding assumptions, and identifying logical flaws in short business-style passages. Calibrated for Filipino candidates.
For candidates aiming to clear this exam on the first attempt, the difference between Band 6 and Band 7+ — or "passing" and "comfortable margin" — usually comes down to fluency on a small number of high-leverage topics. Verbal — Critical Reasoning sits at roughly 12% of the Graduate Management Admission Test content distribution — Critical Reasoning accounts for roughly one-third of GMAT Verbal questions and is the section most responsive to targeted practice. Every CR question has a stimulus (argument), a question type (weaken/strengthen/assumption/flaw/inference/evaluate), and five answer choices. Mastering question-type recognition halves solving time. Pass rates for the GMAT are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Filipino candidates preparing for GMAT, the calibration of study to local context matters: The Philippines is the leading exporter of nurses and seafarers globally. NCLEX, IELTS, and OET are dominant export-credential tests; CGFNS verification is a common prerequisite.
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Selecting an answer that is relevant to the topic but does not affect the specific argument in the stimulus
- !Confusing "weakens the argument" with "contradicts the conclusion"
- !Treating assumptions as conclusions — missing the unstated premise that the argument requires
Study tips
- 1Identify the conclusion first, then the evidence, then the gap (assumption) before reading answer choices.
- 2For Weaken questions, the correct answer attacks the assumption, not just the evidence or conclusion in isolation.
- 3Eliminate answer choices that are "out of scope" — they introduce topics the argument never discusses.
- 4Filipino candidates typically prepare for GMAT alongside CGFNS or commission verification; sequence the credential evaluation and exam booking carefully — they have non-overlapping timelines.
Sample GMAT Verbal — Critical Reasoning questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real GMAT questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
Argument: "Our city installed speed cameras on Main Street, and traffic fatalities on that street fell by 30% in the following year. Therefore, speed cameras reduce traffic fatalities." Which of the following, if true, most weakens this argument?
- AOther cities without speed cameras also saw fatality reductions that year
- BSpeed cameras generate significant revenue for the city
- CMain Street underwent major road resurfacing before the cameras were installedCorrect
- DThe cameras have not been tested on rural roads
Why this answer?
The argument assumes the cameras caused the fatality reduction. If Main Street was resurfaced before camera installation, the resurfacing (not the cameras) could explain the reduction — this weakens the causal claim. Option A would weaken but is less direct; options B and D are out of scope.
- 2
A "necessary assumption" question asks you to find the assumption WITHOUT WHICH:
- AThe conclusion becomes stronger
- BThe argument falls apart (the conclusion cannot be drawn)Correct
- CThe evidence is irrelevant
- DThe argument becomes circular
Why this answer?
A necessary assumption is one the argument must take for granted; if it is false, the argument collapses. Test it with the Negation Test: negate the candidate assumption and check if the argument becomes invalid.
Frequently asked questions
How many Critical Reasoning questions are on the GMAT Focus Edition?
What is the GMAT pass rate for Filipino candidates?
How long should Filipino candidates study Verbal — Critical Reasoning for the GMAT?
Practice GMAT Focus questions free with Koydo.
DI, Verbal, and Quant on the post-2024 Focus blueprint.
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