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...for what may lead to a life altering association!
GMAT Critical Reasoning Evaluate the Argument (or simply “Evaluation”) questions ask you to identify the information that would help you judge the strength of an argument by showing whether its reasoning holds up or breaks down. They teach you to look for the exact point on which the argument depends and to see how new evidence could change your confidence in its conclusion. Steady practice with this question type is an essential part of any thorough GMAT preparation course. This page offers you an organized subtopic wise playlist, along with a few worked examples, for efficient preparation of this concept.
Evaluation questions seek the piece of information that would best test the connection between the evidence and the conclusion. This overview offers a practical lens: first, pinpoint the likely gap in the reasoning, then ask which fact, if known, would most clearly reveal whether the argument is strong or weak, without itself taking sides. The video introduces this method, while the article arranges common stem patterns and decision checks to guide careful, precise reading. The following short video explains this method, shows it in practice, and prepares you to use it consistently in GMAT drills, sectional tests, and full-length GMAT mock tests.


High quality CR Inference questions are not available in large numbers. Among the limited, genuinely strong sources are the official practice materials released by GMAC and the Experts’ Global GMAT course. Within the Experts’ Global GMAT online preparation course, every CR Complete the Paragraph question appears on an exact GMAT like user interface that includes all the real exam tools and features. You work through more than 300 CR Complete the Paragraph questions in quizzes and also take 15 full-length GMAT mock tests that include several CR Complete the Paragraph questions in roughly the same spread and proportion in which they appear on the actual GMAT.
All the best!