Learn about the Reading Comprehension questions on the GRE revised General Test. This lesson covers the passages, the questions, and some general strategy tips.
Reading Comprehension
On the GRE, reading comprehension questions ask you to find and analyze information and arguments presented in a passage. These questions will make up roughly half of the total questions on the verbal reasoning sections of the test.
Reading comprehension questions always start with a passage: anywhere from one to several paragraphs followed by one to six multiple-choice questions that test your understanding of the material in the passage.
These questions don't ask you to remember anything from outside classes; everything you need to know is right there in the passage. But that doesn't make them easy! In this lesson, we'll go over the passages, the questions and some strategies for managing them.
Passage and Questions
Before you look at any actual reading comprehension questions, you'll have to read a passage. So, before getting into the questions themselves here's what you'll see on the readings.
You'll get somewhere around ten passages, which are typically pretty short. Most of them will be a single paragraph, but some of them will be longer multi-paragraph passages. The topics of the passages can be almost anything, but you'll be able to understand them without any specialist knowledge. For example, you might get a passage about the moon landings, but you won't have to know any astronomy or astrophysics to answer the questions - all the facts and subject-matter information you need will be right there in the passage.