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Reading Guides Beginner 6 min read

Can’t Understand RC Passages

You’ve read the passage twice and still can’t tell what it’s saying. That’s not a comprehension problem — it’s a technique problem. Here’s what’s actually going wrong.

6 min read Reading Guides Series Beginner · TOFU
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Quick answer

When you can’t understand RC passages, the problem is almost never vocabulary — it’s that you’re reading all sentences the same way, without tracking what each one is doing. RC passages are built from a small number of logical moves: claim, evidence, qualification, counterargument. Once you learn to spot these, the passage stops feeling like a wall of text and starts making structural sense.

1 What’s actually happening when you can’t follow a passage

Most people who can’t understand RC passages aren’t struggling with the individual words. They can decode each sentence. The problem is at the level above — they’re not tracking how sentences connect to each other, or what role each paragraph plays in the passage’s overall argument.

RC passages — whether from CAT, GMAT, GRE, or any reading comprehension test — are almost always argumentative. Someone is claiming something, then supporting it, then dealing with objections. If you read each sentence as a standalone unit, you lose the thread. The passage feels like a random collection of facts when it’s actually a structured line of reasoning.

This is a technique problem, not a reading ability problem. And technique is trainable. The Simple View of Reading explains why: comprehension depends on both decoding words and understanding how language builds meaning — the second part is what breaks down in dense RC passages.

2 Why this matters beyond the exam hall

If you’re preparing for an exam, RC passages typically account for 30–40% of the verbal score. That number alone makes this worth fixing. But the skill transfers directly to everything you read professionally — reports, long emails, dense articles. The ability to follow a complex argument on first read is one of the most practically useful things you can build.

💡 Reader’s Insight

Prior knowledge is one of the strongest predictors of reading comprehension — a reader who knows nothing about a topic will struggle with a passage on that topic far more than their general reading fluency would suggest. This means the more broadly you read across subjects, the less often you’ll hit a passage that stops you cold. Regular reading practice with varied topics is comprehension training, not just habit building.

Once you understand what’s breaking down, the fix becomes specific. Here’s how to work through it systematically.

3 A step-by-step technique for passages you can’t follow

1

Read the first and last sentence of the passage before reading it fully

The first sentence usually sets up the topic or the author’s position. The last sentence often restates the conclusion or the main takeaway. Reading these two first gives you a frame — so when you read the rest, you know what you’re looking for rather than absorbing it cold.

2

Label each paragraph with one word as you read

Not a summary — one word. “Claim.” “Evidence.” “Objection.” “Rebuttal.” “Concession.” This forces you to think about what the paragraph is doing, not just what it says. If you can’t label it, that’s your signal to re-read that paragraph only — not the whole passage.

3

Find the author’s main claim — stated or implied

Every RC passage has a central position the author is advancing. It’s often in the first paragraph, sometimes in the last, occasionally only implied throughout. Identifying this is the single most important thing you can do. Once you know what the author is arguing, every other paragraph becomes easier to place.

4

Track what changes across paragraphs

Good RC readers notice when the passage shifts — from presenting an idea to challenging it, from giving evidence to qualifying it. Watch for transition words: “however,” “but,” “although,” “while,” “despite.” These signal a shift in the argument’s direction, and most RC questions are built around exactly those moments.

5

After reading, state the passage’s argument in two sentences without looking back

One sentence for the main claim, one for the main support or contrast. If you can do this, your comprehension of the passage was solid enough to answer most questions. If you can’t, you’ve identified the gap — and you can go back to the specific paragraph that lost you rather than re-reading everything.

4 What this looks like on a real passage

Take a passage arguing that urban green spaces reduce stress levels in city residents. First sentence: “Green spaces in cities have long been considered aesthetic luxuries.” Last sentence: “The evidence now suggests they function as public health infrastructure.” You already know the passage is going to argue that something previously seen as optional is actually necessary.

Paragraph 2 gives research data. Your label: “Evidence.” Paragraph 3 introduces critics who argue green spaces are costly to maintain. Your label: “Objection.” Paragraph 4 responds to that objection by citing long-term healthcare savings. Your label: “Rebuttal.”

After finishing, you state the argument: “The author argues urban green spaces are essential public health infrastructure, not luxuries — because their health benefits outweigh their maintenance costs.” That’s it. You now understand the passage well enough to answer questions about the main idea, the author’s tone, and the function of any individual paragraph. This is what active reading techniques look like applied to a real RC passage.

📌 Try this today

Pick any opinion piece from today’s newspaper — around 400 words. Read the first and last sentence, then read the full piece and label each paragraph with one word. After finishing, write the author’s argument in two sentences. Don’t check back. Whatever you write is a direct measure of how well you followed the passage. Do this once a day for two weeks and the technique becomes automatic.

5 Mistakes that keep you stuck when you can’t understand RC passages

The most common mistake: re-reading the whole passage when you lose the thread. This is slow and usually unhelpful. You lose focus because of one paragraph, not the whole piece — so re-read that paragraph specifically, not everything before it.

⚠ Common mistake

Trying to memorise every detail as you read. RC questions rarely test whether you remembered a specific fact — they test whether you understood the structure and argument of the passage. Readers who try to retain everything slow down and lose the big picture. Read for structure first. The details are still on the page when you need them.

The second mistake: avoiding hard passages. If you only practise on material that’s comfortable, you never build the skill to handle the passages that appear on exams or in demanding professional reading. You need exposure to text that challenges you — with a technique to work through it, not around it.

The third: skipping the two-sentence summary step at the end. This is the exact moment where passive reading becomes critical reading — the moment you test whether you actually followed the argument or just moved your eyes to the end. It takes thirty seconds. Most people skip it. The ones who don’t are the ones who improve.

Research

Active reading strategies — predicting, questioning, summarising, and clarifying — significantly outperform passive reading in comprehension tasks. The effect is large and consistent across age groups and text types.

— Palincsar & Brown, Cognition and Instruction, 1984

Questions readers ask

Start with the first-and-last-sentence technique on a single passage today — 300 to 400 words from a newspaper opinion piece works well. Don’t begin with a practice test passage; begin with something you’d actually read. The technique needs to feel manageable first. Once labelling paragraphs becomes automatic on familiar material, move to exam-style passages where the argument is denser and less obvious.

Opinion and analysis pieces before exam passages. News articles tell you facts; opinion pieces argue positions. RC passages are almost always argumentative — so practising on argumentative text trains the right muscle. Once you can label paragraphs and state the argument of a broadsheet opinion piece, exam-style RC passages feel structurally familiar even when the topic is unfamiliar.

Active reading means assigning a function to each paragraph as you read it — not just absorbing content. The simplest version is one-word labelling: “claim,” “evidence,” “objection,” “example.” The next level is tracking transition words that signal shifts in argument direction. If you reach the end of a paragraph and can’t label it, re-read it specifically. That’s the moment where passive readers give up and active readers get better.

Write the passage’s main argument in two sentences immediately after finishing — without looking back. This is the most direct form of self-testing, and research consistently shows it produces better retention than re-reading. What you can reconstruct from memory is what you actually understood. What you can’t reconstruct is your study target for next time, not a reason to re-read the same passage again.

Track how often your two-sentence summary matches the passage’s actual argument — not just whether you got questions right. Keep a simple log: passage type, whether you could label the paragraphs cleanly, whether your summary was accurate. After two weeks, you’ll see a pattern. If paragraph labelling is still slow, that’s your focus. If the summary is consistently off, you’re losing the argument somewhere in the middle — usually where the passage introduces an objection or a qualification.

Put the technique to work

Readlite has graded article reads across 60+ subjects — each with comprehension questions built in, so you can practise paragraph-level tracking on real passages from day one.

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