The 7 CR Question Types You Need to Know
for the GMAT
www.gmatpill.com
Understand the range of CR Question types you might see on the GMAT
Learn to identify the type of question based on how the question stem is
worded
Increase speed and efficiency by quickly identifying the question type and
the corresponding framework strategy associated with that question type
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GMAT Pill Analyzed Critical Reasoning Question Types in The
Official Guide (OG13)…
Of the 124 available CR questions from the Official Guide 13th edition (excluding
questions from the diagnostic section), GMAT Pill has identified 79 of the 124
questions (52%) that test you on how to strengthen an argument.
At GMAT Pill, we noticed that “strengthens” questions tested the same types of
logic over and over and that they all fall under a core set of five frameworks. That
means, if you learn the relevant 5 frameworks for “strengthens” questions, you’ll
have learned the strategies to answer more than half of the CR questions on the
GMAT.
We also noticed that “strengthens” questions tended to be worded in a similar
way. The question stems tended to repeat so we categorized “strengthens”
questions into 3 subcategories:
General Strengthens (30%)
Helps Explain (12%)
Assumption / Argument Depends (10%)
The “helps explain” question stem is typically worded as: “Which of the following
most helps explain the discrepancy observed above?”
The “assumption / argument depends” question stem is typically worded as:
“Which of the following is an assumption on which the argument depends?”
These two question stems are variations off of a “strengthens” question and
come up quite frequently in the OG13. As a result, we created separate categories
for them. All other “strengthens” questions fall under the “general strengthens”
category.
These are the official guide questions with the “general strengthens” concept in
action.
#1, 5, 7, 11, 12, 14, 17 19, 21, 23, 30, 31, 33, 35, 40, 45, 50, 52, 53, 55, 56, 59, 64,
65, 67, 69, 74, 80, 81, 95, 101, 102, 103, 108, 111, 118, 120, 121
You’ll find a more detailed listing of the relevant OG13 questions by GMAT Pill CR
Question Type in the table further below.
Overall Breakdown of OG13 CR Question Types
Here is a more complete breakdown of the GMAT Pill categorizations for the CR Questions in the OG13.
Strengthens (52%) o General Strengthens (30%) o Helps Explain (12%) o Assumption / Argument Depends (10%)
Weaken (20%)
Evaluate (10%)
Boldface (10%)
Inference (8%)
Question Type Question Stem
Strengthen (30%)
From OG13:
#1, 5, 7, 11, 12, 14, 17 19, 23,
30, 31, 33, 35, 40, 45, 50, 52,
53, 55, 56, 59, 64, 65, 67, 69,
74, 80, 81, 95, 101, 102, 103,
108, 111, 118, 120, 121
“does most to justify the expectation that…”
“[argument], since _____”
“most strongly supports the argument…”
“most strongly supports the hypothesis that …”
“provides the strongest grounds that…”
“…provides the best reason for the expectation that [argument]...”
“…would provide most support for the prediction that…”
“conclusion would be more reasonably drawn if which of the
following were true”
Helps Explain (12%)
From OG13
#3, 6, 9, 13, 16, 22, 24, 44, 49,
57, 61, 86, 92, 94, 99
“…most helps explain…”
“… does most to help explain…”
“… best accounts for…”
“… is least helpful in explaining…”
Assumption (10%)
From OG13:
#21, 39, 41, 46, 48, 75, 77, 83,
93, 96, 106, 109, 113
“[Assumption] on which argument depends”
“[conclusion] drawn is based on the [assumption] that…”
“argument relies on which of the following assumptions..”
“which of the following is required for X to occur”
“…assumes that…”
“…an assumption that supports drawing the conclusion above”
“… depends on which one of the following assumptions…”
“assumption made in drawing the conclusion above”
“…based on the assumption that…"
“…argument must be true assuming that ____”
“conclusion is properly drawn if which of the following is assumed"
Weaken (20%)
From OG13:
# 2, 4, 8, 20, 25, 32, 37, 43,
51, 58, 62, 71, 73, 79, 82, 87,
88, 90, 100, 107, 112, 115,
117, 119, 122
“Argument is flawed because…”
“…does not support…”
“…most seriously weakens...”
“…following criticism…”
“…basis for arguing against…”
“…would cast serious doubt…”
“…undermines the argument”
“…counters the objection…”
Evaluate (10%)
From OG13:
#10, 15, 27, 36, 42, 47, 68, 70,
72, 110, 114, 124
“The answer to which of the following would be most useful for
evaluating the reasoning provided?”
“For which of the following would it be most useful to establish in
evaluating the argument”
“…which of the following must be studied in order to evaluate the
argument”
“For purposes of evaluating the argument, it would be most useful
to establish which of the following?”
“…which would be most useful to know in determining whether…”
“…which would be most important to determine in order to evaluate
the argument?”
Inference (8%)
From OG13:
#26, 29, 38, 54, 60, 66, 91, 97,
104, 105
“if … then [inferred statement] must also be true”
“…can most properly be drawn from the information...”
“…can logically be expected to…”
“If the statements above are true, which of the following must be
true”
“If the facts stated in the passage above are true, then…”
“Which of the following conclusions is best supported by the
passage?”
“The statements, if true, best support which of the following as a
On your GMAT, you’ll only see around 14 or so CR questions out of the 41 verbal questions. As such, it’s possible you might not get a question in each of the categories defined above. You may do a practice test at home, then take the real GMAT and suddenly discover that the questions were not familiar to you. You may have gotten a question type that you didn’t see in your practice test. So it’s no guarantee that you’ll see all 7 CR question types on the GMAT exam that YOU take. But you should definitely be prepared to tackle all of these types of CR questions by test day.
conclusion?”
“which of the following, if it occurred, would constitute X described
above?”
“…the statements above, if true, best support which of the following
assertions?”
“The considerations given best serve as part of an argument that …”
Bold (10%)
From OG13:
#18, 28, 34, 63, 76, 78, 84, 85,
89, 98, 116, 123
Something is bolded or question asks about structure
“…the [bolded portion plays / two-boldfaced portions play] which of
the following roles…”
“…develops the argument by…”
“Person A responds to Person B by…”
“…describes the role played by the bolded portion…”
GMAT Pill CR Frameworks GMAT Pill utilizes a core set of 10 frameworks to approach the CR question types. At the core is the 52% of CR questions covered by Frameworks #1-5. These are the “strengthens” questions. Here again, are the "Strengthens" questions that represent 52% fo CR questions:
Strengthens (52%) General Strengthens (30%) Helps Explain (12%) Assumption / Argument Depends (10%)
And here are the GMATPill Framework Strategies to attack these "Strengthens" questions: Strategy for "Strengthens": General Visualization Strategy for "Strengthens": Framework #1: Before/After Strategy for "Strengthens": Framework #2: Linked Chains Strategy for "Strengthens": Framework #3: Expectation vs Actuality Strategy for "Strengthens": Framework #4: Negation (Regular and Exclusive) Strategy for "Strengthens": Framework #5: Sample Generalization Note here that there are 3 subcategories to “strengthens” questions.
General Strengthens: Utilizes any of Frameworks #1-5 + General Visualization
Helps Explain: Utilizes Framework #3
Assumption / Argument Depends: Utilizes Frameworks #1, 2, 4, 5 + General Visualization
The remaining 48% of CR questions are covered by Frameworks #6-10
Framework #6: Weakens and Defends Framework #7: Evaluate Framework #8: Inference Framework #9: Bold-faced Framework #10: Circular Reasoning The corresponding framework for the remaining CR question types are more simple to remember. “Weakens” questions use the “weakens” framework; “evaluate” questions use the “evaluate” framework; “inference” use the “inference” framework; and “bold-faced” questions use the “bold-faced” framework. The last one, Framework #10 Circular Reasoning, is more of a miscellaneous framework which actually is a form of “strengthens” but is very rare to see on the GMAT. While we won’t go into detail about these 10 Core CR Frameworks, it’s good to see that there is some organization and structure towards the approach to CR questions. That’s key. When you prepare, it’s more important to understand the general concepts of what is being tested, rather than the specifics of a question. Otherwise, if you simply modify the question a little bit (something the GMAT folks do), you’ll be stumped. Something you answered correctly before suddenly becomes foreign to you and you get it wrong. You want to avoid that by focusing your studies on the core logic that is being tested. Master the core and you’ll be on your way to mastering the GMAT.
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