First, Second, and Third Person - What Your Teacher Actually Wants

You know that feeling when you get an essay back, and there’s just a giant red circle around a paragraph with the words “POV SHIFT” written next to it? Yeah. It’s the worst.

Most of the time, teachers just assume you already know the difference between first, second, and third person. But if nobody actually sat down and explained it to you, you're basically just guessing.

Honestly? It’s just about figuring out where you’re holding the camera. Let's break it down so you never lose points on this again.

First Person: You Are in the Room

This is you talking. You are actively in the story or the essay.

Second Person: Breaking the Fourth Wall

This is when you talk directly to whoever is reading your paper.

Third Person: The Fly on the Wall

This is the outsider view. You aren't in the story, and you aren't talking to the reader. You're just watching things happen and reporting back.

The Big Mistake to Avoid

The number one thing that drives graders crazy is when you switch perspectives in the middle of a thought.

Don't start a paragraph with "People need sleep" (third person) and finish it with "so we should go to bed earlier" (first person). It gives the reader whiplash. Pick a lane and stay in it!

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