GMAT · Verbal — Reading Comprehension · Florida, USA

Verbal — Reading Comprehension for the GMAT Exam — Florida candidates

12% of the GMAT test plan. Analyzing 200–350 word business, science, and social-science passages to answer main-idea, inference, and application questions. Calibrated for Floridian candidates.

Examiners do not award marks for content alone — they award them for the ability to demonstrate competency in the precise format the test demands. Verbal — Reading Comprehension sits at roughly 12% of the Graduate Management Admission Test content distribution — Reading Comprehension (RC) rewards candidates who can extract structure — main argument, supporting evidence, author tone — without re-reading. GMAT RC passages are dense and technical; the questions test whether you can distinguish what the passage states from what you infer. Pass rates for the GMAT are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Florida candidates preparing for GMAT, the calibration of study to local context matters: Florida is a top-5 NCLEX-RN state and a leading destination for internationally-educated nurses. The Florida Board of Nursing has a separate endorsement track for foreign-trained candidates.

Pass rates for GMAT (Florida, USA) are published periodically by the awarding body.

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.

  • !Spending too long reading the passage and not leaving time for the questions
  • !Selecting an answer that is factually true but not stated in the passage
  • !Misidentifying the main purpose by focusing on a detail paragraph

Study tips

  • 1Read for structure, not content: identify the main claim, the counterpoint (if any), and the author's position in under 2 minutes.
  • 2For "main idea" questions, eliminate answers that are too narrow (detail only) or too broad (beyond passage scope).
  • 3For "inference" questions, the correct answer must be directly supportable by passage text — no outside knowledge.
  • 4For NCLEX-RN: Florida is a Compact state — a Florida licence allows practice in 40+ NLC member states without re-applying. Plan for the multistate licensure premium when budgeting.
  • 5For internationally-educated nurses: CGFNS CES report (not VisaScreen alone) is required by the Florida Board. Allow 8–12 weeks for CES processing.
  • 6For CDL: FL DHSMV waives the skills test for active-duty military with equivalent vehicle experience; bring DD-214 and CDL skills-test waiver form.

Sample GMAT Verbal — Reading Comprehension questions

These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real GMAT questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.

  1. 1

    A GMAT RC passage argues that remote work increases productivity but notes two studies showing mixed results. The primary purpose of the passage is most likely to:

    • AArgue definitively that remote work increases productivity
    • BPresent a nuanced view of the evidence on remote work and productivityCorrect
    • CSummarize the two studies showing mixed results
    • DRecommend a remote work policy for companies
    Why this answer?

    The passage presents a claim and then qualifies it with contradictory evidence — a classic "nuanced analysis" structure. Option A overstates; option C reduces the passage to the studies alone; option D introduces a recommendation not present in the passage.

Frequently asked questions

Should I read the questions before the passage on GMAT RC?
Most high scorers recommend reading the passage first (for structure) then the questions. Reading questions first can bias your reading and slow you down. Exception: if a passage is very technical, skimming the question stems before a second read can help focus.
What is the GMAT pass rate for Floridian candidates?
Pass rates for GMAT candidates in Florida, USA are published periodically by the awarding body. Practice questions, full-length simulations, and weak-area drills are the highest-impact way to improve your odds.
How long should Floridian candidates study Verbal — Reading Comprehension for the GMAT?
For most candidates, focused mastery of Verbal — Reading Comprehension requires 20–40 hours of deliberate practice — drilling sample questions, reviewing failure modes, and timing yourself against exam conditions. Florida is a top-5 NCLEX-RN state and a leading destination for internationally-educated nurses. The Florida Board of Nursing has a separate endorsement track for foreign-trained candidates. Combine Verbal — Reading Comprehension study with full-length mock exams in the final two weeks before your test date.

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