Is using first person in academic/technical essays always bad?
For as long as I can remember, my teachers have taught me never to use first person in an essay. Yet, some of the examples we read in classes, or older writings we have to annotate, are written in first person. So what is the actual rule here? Why is using first person in essays considered unacceptable?
academic-writing essay grammatical-person rules
add a comment |
For as long as I can remember, my teachers have taught me never to use first person in an essay. Yet, some of the examples we read in classes, or older writings we have to annotate, are written in first person. So what is the actual rule here? Why is using first person in essays considered unacceptable?
academic-writing essay grammatical-person rules
1
Are you sure that your teachers haven’t confused first person and first person singular?
– Wrzlprmft
Feb 10 at 20:41
I removed [technical-writing] because it is specifically about creating documentation, not essays (even though the term is used for essays outside of Writing.SE).
– Cyn
Feb 10 at 23:37
add a comment |
For as long as I can remember, my teachers have taught me never to use first person in an essay. Yet, some of the examples we read in classes, or older writings we have to annotate, are written in first person. So what is the actual rule here? Why is using first person in essays considered unacceptable?
academic-writing essay grammatical-person rules
For as long as I can remember, my teachers have taught me never to use first person in an essay. Yet, some of the examples we read in classes, or older writings we have to annotate, are written in first person. So what is the actual rule here? Why is using first person in essays considered unacceptable?
academic-writing essay grammatical-person rules
academic-writing essay grammatical-person rules
edited Feb 10 at 23:36
Cyn
18k13883
18k13883
asked Feb 10 at 16:28
weakdnaweakdna
3,53242363
3,53242363
1
Are you sure that your teachers haven’t confused first person and first person singular?
– Wrzlprmft
Feb 10 at 20:41
I removed [technical-writing] because it is specifically about creating documentation, not essays (even though the term is used for essays outside of Writing.SE).
– Cyn
Feb 10 at 23:37
add a comment |
1
Are you sure that your teachers haven’t confused first person and first person singular?
– Wrzlprmft
Feb 10 at 20:41
I removed [technical-writing] because it is specifically about creating documentation, not essays (even though the term is used for essays outside of Writing.SE).
– Cyn
Feb 10 at 23:37
1
1
Are you sure that your teachers haven’t confused first person and first person singular?
– Wrzlprmft
Feb 10 at 20:41
Are you sure that your teachers haven’t confused first person and first person singular?
– Wrzlprmft
Feb 10 at 20:41
I removed [technical-writing] because it is specifically about creating documentation, not essays (even though the term is used for essays outside of Writing.SE).
– Cyn
Feb 10 at 23:37
I removed [technical-writing] because it is specifically about creating documentation, not essays (even though the term is used for essays outside of Writing.SE).
– Cyn
Feb 10 at 23:37
add a comment |
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
This depends on your style guide and potentially your teacher/school/boss/etc.'s guidelines. If your teacher (for example) says to avoid using the first person you may be able to negotiate to change their position, but ultimately they are the ones evaluating your work so you need to follow their rules.
None of the three major American style guides forbids using first person.
This is what the APA Blog has to say about the first person:
I am often asked why APA Style prohibits the use of I or we. I love this question, because the answer is always a pleasant surprise: I or we is perfectly acceptable in APA Style! In fact, the Publication Manual actually recommends using first person, when appropriate, to avoid ambiguity.
(Another APA blog post also addresses this issue.)
According to a Q&A on the CMOS website, the CMOS says this:
Please see CMOS 5.220, s.v. I; me: “When you need the first person, use it. It’s not immodest to use it; it’s superstitious not to.”
Another Q&A on their site says:
Avoiding the first person used to be considered proper, but now it’s considered very formal, if not old-fashioned. It’s not a question of correctness, however; both styles are correct. If you feel strongly that the first person is out of place in your work, don’t use it.
MLA, on their webpage, says:
Let the first-person singular be, instead, a tool that you take out when you think it’s needed and that you leave in the toolbox when you think it’s not.
Everyone seem to forget that we is also first person!
– Zeus
Feb 11 at 7:21
add a comment |
My recommendation is to use first-person pronouns only for attribution. If you do something original, such as a thesis or other research, it makes sense to use "we" for things you did with your supervisor, or "I" for what you managed on your own. It's important to examiners/reviewers to know what is one, what is the other and what is instead due to previous academics, and to be confident of your non-plagiaristic honesty on that front. Laurel's answer shows a number of style guides for such writing gives similar advice.
If your essay contains nothing original, such as when you give an overview of the arguments for and against philosophers' views on an issue, the fact you wrote the essay is immaterial, and you should effectively be as anonymous as a Wikipedia article's author(s). Although you don't go into detail about where you read an author using "I", my best guess is it was when they made a case for something of their own.
1
The second paragraph hints at a reason that is grammatical. The I verb clauses on sentences are redundant with a single author and ambiguous if there are coauthors.
– Dan D.
Feb 11 at 12:59
@DanD Well, I can be necessary when contrasting with what third parties did, thought etc., while "first-person" pronouns include both I and we, and you'll sometimes need these with co-authors.
– J.G.
Feb 11 at 13:01
add a comment |
Like with so many other issues of style, it depends on your audience.
For a school essay, your audience is your teacher. So write the essay your teacher wants, no matter if it's okay to do it another way elsewhere.
If you submit an essay or article for publication, the audience is the publisher, and you should follow its rules. A publisher curates for a larger audience and will have rules and expectations for authors that fit those needs.
Some academic essays need to be in first person. Imagine a college application essay written in 3rd person. I'm sure people have done it. I wouldn't advise it. If you're writing an essay to read out loud at a conference or other presentation, and it's about your work, you also need to use first person or it's just weird and confusing.
Figure out your audience and adjust your writing accordingly.
I had a number of classmates in college who wrote their college application essays in the 3rd person. While I don't know exactly what the issue was, the effectiveness of the technique was suggested by the fact that they were all going to the public college I was going to, which did not have a college application essay. I think there were a few people I met at my school who had said they'd used the first person on their application essays, so it clearly wasn't the only factor. But it was apparently a common practice among those who applied to prestigious schools and didn't get accepted.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:02
@EdGrimm Back in my day, college application essays were always things like "what is something that defines my character?" or "why I want to go to your school". I even once got "what animal would I be and why?" Writing anything like that in 3rd person would be completely nuts, IMHO. But maybe they got some questions where the topic could be in 3rd person? Or something that could go either way?
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:21
For all of the ones I even vaguely remember, the people who wrote them thought they were nuts to write in the third person, but did so anyway due to having learned in high school to always write in the third person.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:31
1
Oy vey. Talk about the wrong lessons to take away from high school. And ugh that their schools didn't have counselors to help with this stuff.
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:33
add a comment |
The restrictions on 1st person (singular or plural) does depend on:
- The genre of writing
- The style guide being followed
- The opinion of the teacher/instructor/advisor/publisher/editor
- The context within the paper
Genre of Writing
Generally speaking, it is research writing that tends to favor not using 1st person. The reason for this is that research ought to be objective, not subjective, and too many inexperienced students (i.e. college undergraduates or younger, though even some graduates) doing research writing tend to write opinion, rather than properly researched and documented facts. So for these types of students, it is often safest for a teacher to say avoid 1st person. This helps force the student not to be thinking about what they "believe," but rather what they can "prove" via their research.
Style Guides
Style guides vary on what is allowed, but generally have some similar ideas. For instance, The Concise Rules of APA, 6th edition (2010) states for an appropriate use of 1st person (bold added):
Innappropriately or illogically attributing action in an effort to be objective can be misleading. ... To avoid ambiguity, use a personal pronoun rather than the third person when describing steps taken in your experiment.
Correct:
We reviewed the literature.
Incorrect:
The authors reviewed the literature. (sec. 1.09, pp. 19-20)
But then further clarifies use (bold added):
For clarity, restrict your use of we to refer only to yourself and your coauthors (use I if you are the sole author of the paper). Broader uses of we may leave your readers wondering to whom you are referring. (sec. 1.09, p. 20)
So in short, don't include in a "we" (1) the readers, (2) other people in the field of study who did not author the paper with you.
Similarly, A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations, 9th edition (2018), which tends to follow The Chicago Manual of Style in a lot of respects, says the following about avoiding 1st person (bold added):
Most instructors and editors do agree that two uses of I should be avoided:
- Insecure writers begin too many sentences with I think or I believe (or their equivalent, In my opinion). Readers assume that you think and believe what you write, so you don't have to say you do.
- Inexperienced writers too often narrate their research: First I consulted ..., then I examined ..., and so on. Reader care less about the story of your research than about its results. (sec. 11.1.7, p. 120)
And then later notes two more with respect to the 1st person plural as well:
But many instructors and editors object to other uses of we:
- the royal we used to refer reflexively to the writer
- the all-purpose we that refers to people in general (sec. 11.1.7, p. 121)
Between the above inappropriate uses, the manual notes some positive uses:
The first person is appropriate on two occasions ...
- An occasional introductory I (or we) believe can soften the dogmatic edge of a statement ... The trick is not to hedge so often that you sound uncertain or so rarely that you sound smug.
- ... when it's the subject of a verb naming an action unique to you as the writer of your argument. Verbs referring to such actions typically appear in introductions (I will show/argue/prove/claim that X) and in conclusions (I have demonstrated/concluded that Y). Since only you can show, prove, or claim what's in your argument, only you can say so with I. ... On the other hand, researchers rarely use the first person for an action that others must repeat to replicate their research. Those words include divide, measure, weigh, examine, and so on. ... Those same principles apply to we, if you're one of two or more authors. (sec. 11.1.7, pp. 120-121)
Authority's Opinion
Style guides give some "allowance," but whoever an author is writing for has ultimate say on what precisely is allowed. This is generally noted in the style guides as well.
For instance, the second bullet point in the preceding quote about "appropriate" uses would not be a valid use by a number of people in authority who believe such metadiscourse (or signposting) that gives a discussion of what the author "will do" in the paper is bad writing for a couple of reasons: (1) regarding whether an author "proves" the point or not is up to the reader, whether the author believes it was proven or not; (2) what the author is showing, arguing, claiming, etc., should be evident within good writing without it being explicitly stated.
The point, however, is that the one the author is writing for (whether a class or a publication) determines the appropriate uses of 1st person; the author just needs to follow the rules laid down.
Context within the Paper
This relates directly to the caveats noted in the style guide section above, and also relates to the authority's acceptance or not. Some places in a paper may be appropriate to use 1st person, other places not. If an author is giving a personal illustration, it would be appropriate; but in a research paper, a personal illustration is generally not often used (since it cannot be verified; it is subjective). So whether or not it is allowed in a particular place will no doubt depend much on the context within the paper itself.
add a comment |
I will try to convey the request and explanation of one of my professors. He specifically asked me to change generic speaking to 1st person singular.
(His) explanation:
It is OK to use generic speaking or 3rd person if you talk about
something that is generally known, or it was published / researched by
somebody else. But if you describe your own work, it is confusing to
use anything else than 1st person singular.
It was very reasonable (and very awkward - to learn to take responsibility and credit for my own work), but it became my own thinking meanwhile.
add a comment |
It depends on what your goal is. If your essay is supposed to say something about the world in general, you should maybe avoid the first person, because that could make it seem as if your essay's conclusions are based on a sample size of one, which would detract from its validity.
On the other hand, if you want to share something you personally accomplished, or discovered, or witnessed, then using the first person could add validity to your essay, because hey, you were there, right?
add a comment |
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6 Answers
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6 Answers
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This depends on your style guide and potentially your teacher/school/boss/etc.'s guidelines. If your teacher (for example) says to avoid using the first person you may be able to negotiate to change their position, but ultimately they are the ones evaluating your work so you need to follow their rules.
None of the three major American style guides forbids using first person.
This is what the APA Blog has to say about the first person:
I am often asked why APA Style prohibits the use of I or we. I love this question, because the answer is always a pleasant surprise: I or we is perfectly acceptable in APA Style! In fact, the Publication Manual actually recommends using first person, when appropriate, to avoid ambiguity.
(Another APA blog post also addresses this issue.)
According to a Q&A on the CMOS website, the CMOS says this:
Please see CMOS 5.220, s.v. I; me: “When you need the first person, use it. It’s not immodest to use it; it’s superstitious not to.”
Another Q&A on their site says:
Avoiding the first person used to be considered proper, but now it’s considered very formal, if not old-fashioned. It’s not a question of correctness, however; both styles are correct. If you feel strongly that the first person is out of place in your work, don’t use it.
MLA, on their webpage, says:
Let the first-person singular be, instead, a tool that you take out when you think it’s needed and that you leave in the toolbox when you think it’s not.
Everyone seem to forget that we is also first person!
– Zeus
Feb 11 at 7:21
add a comment |
This depends on your style guide and potentially your teacher/school/boss/etc.'s guidelines. If your teacher (for example) says to avoid using the first person you may be able to negotiate to change their position, but ultimately they are the ones evaluating your work so you need to follow their rules.
None of the three major American style guides forbids using first person.
This is what the APA Blog has to say about the first person:
I am often asked why APA Style prohibits the use of I or we. I love this question, because the answer is always a pleasant surprise: I or we is perfectly acceptable in APA Style! In fact, the Publication Manual actually recommends using first person, when appropriate, to avoid ambiguity.
(Another APA blog post also addresses this issue.)
According to a Q&A on the CMOS website, the CMOS says this:
Please see CMOS 5.220, s.v. I; me: “When you need the first person, use it. It’s not immodest to use it; it’s superstitious not to.”
Another Q&A on their site says:
Avoiding the first person used to be considered proper, but now it’s considered very formal, if not old-fashioned. It’s not a question of correctness, however; both styles are correct. If you feel strongly that the first person is out of place in your work, don’t use it.
MLA, on their webpage, says:
Let the first-person singular be, instead, a tool that you take out when you think it’s needed and that you leave in the toolbox when you think it’s not.
Everyone seem to forget that we is also first person!
– Zeus
Feb 11 at 7:21
add a comment |
This depends on your style guide and potentially your teacher/school/boss/etc.'s guidelines. If your teacher (for example) says to avoid using the first person you may be able to negotiate to change their position, but ultimately they are the ones evaluating your work so you need to follow their rules.
None of the three major American style guides forbids using first person.
This is what the APA Blog has to say about the first person:
I am often asked why APA Style prohibits the use of I or we. I love this question, because the answer is always a pleasant surprise: I or we is perfectly acceptable in APA Style! In fact, the Publication Manual actually recommends using first person, when appropriate, to avoid ambiguity.
(Another APA blog post also addresses this issue.)
According to a Q&A on the CMOS website, the CMOS says this:
Please see CMOS 5.220, s.v. I; me: “When you need the first person, use it. It’s not immodest to use it; it’s superstitious not to.”
Another Q&A on their site says:
Avoiding the first person used to be considered proper, but now it’s considered very formal, if not old-fashioned. It’s not a question of correctness, however; both styles are correct. If you feel strongly that the first person is out of place in your work, don’t use it.
MLA, on their webpage, says:
Let the first-person singular be, instead, a tool that you take out when you think it’s needed and that you leave in the toolbox when you think it’s not.
This depends on your style guide and potentially your teacher/school/boss/etc.'s guidelines. If your teacher (for example) says to avoid using the first person you may be able to negotiate to change their position, but ultimately they are the ones evaluating your work so you need to follow their rules.
None of the three major American style guides forbids using first person.
This is what the APA Blog has to say about the first person:
I am often asked why APA Style prohibits the use of I or we. I love this question, because the answer is always a pleasant surprise: I or we is perfectly acceptable in APA Style! In fact, the Publication Manual actually recommends using first person, when appropriate, to avoid ambiguity.
(Another APA blog post also addresses this issue.)
According to a Q&A on the CMOS website, the CMOS says this:
Please see CMOS 5.220, s.v. I; me: “When you need the first person, use it. It’s not immodest to use it; it’s superstitious not to.”
Another Q&A on their site says:
Avoiding the first person used to be considered proper, but now it’s considered very formal, if not old-fashioned. It’s not a question of correctness, however; both styles are correct. If you feel strongly that the first person is out of place in your work, don’t use it.
MLA, on their webpage, says:
Let the first-person singular be, instead, a tool that you take out when you think it’s needed and that you leave in the toolbox when you think it’s not.
answered Feb 10 at 18:57
LaurelLaurel
1,018113
1,018113
Everyone seem to forget that we is also first person!
– Zeus
Feb 11 at 7:21
add a comment |
Everyone seem to forget that we is also first person!
– Zeus
Feb 11 at 7:21
Everyone seem to forget that we is also first person!
– Zeus
Feb 11 at 7:21
Everyone seem to forget that we is also first person!
– Zeus
Feb 11 at 7:21
add a comment |
My recommendation is to use first-person pronouns only for attribution. If you do something original, such as a thesis or other research, it makes sense to use "we" for things you did with your supervisor, or "I" for what you managed on your own. It's important to examiners/reviewers to know what is one, what is the other and what is instead due to previous academics, and to be confident of your non-plagiaristic honesty on that front. Laurel's answer shows a number of style guides for such writing gives similar advice.
If your essay contains nothing original, such as when you give an overview of the arguments for and against philosophers' views on an issue, the fact you wrote the essay is immaterial, and you should effectively be as anonymous as a Wikipedia article's author(s). Although you don't go into detail about where you read an author using "I", my best guess is it was when they made a case for something of their own.
1
The second paragraph hints at a reason that is grammatical. The I verb clauses on sentences are redundant with a single author and ambiguous if there are coauthors.
– Dan D.
Feb 11 at 12:59
@DanD Well, I can be necessary when contrasting with what third parties did, thought etc., while "first-person" pronouns include both I and we, and you'll sometimes need these with co-authors.
– J.G.
Feb 11 at 13:01
add a comment |
My recommendation is to use first-person pronouns only for attribution. If you do something original, such as a thesis or other research, it makes sense to use "we" for things you did with your supervisor, or "I" for what you managed on your own. It's important to examiners/reviewers to know what is one, what is the other and what is instead due to previous academics, and to be confident of your non-plagiaristic honesty on that front. Laurel's answer shows a number of style guides for such writing gives similar advice.
If your essay contains nothing original, such as when you give an overview of the arguments for and against philosophers' views on an issue, the fact you wrote the essay is immaterial, and you should effectively be as anonymous as a Wikipedia article's author(s). Although you don't go into detail about where you read an author using "I", my best guess is it was when they made a case for something of their own.
1
The second paragraph hints at a reason that is grammatical. The I verb clauses on sentences are redundant with a single author and ambiguous if there are coauthors.
– Dan D.
Feb 11 at 12:59
@DanD Well, I can be necessary when contrasting with what third parties did, thought etc., while "first-person" pronouns include both I and we, and you'll sometimes need these with co-authors.
– J.G.
Feb 11 at 13:01
add a comment |
My recommendation is to use first-person pronouns only for attribution. If you do something original, such as a thesis or other research, it makes sense to use "we" for things you did with your supervisor, or "I" for what you managed on your own. It's important to examiners/reviewers to know what is one, what is the other and what is instead due to previous academics, and to be confident of your non-plagiaristic honesty on that front. Laurel's answer shows a number of style guides for such writing gives similar advice.
If your essay contains nothing original, such as when you give an overview of the arguments for and against philosophers' views on an issue, the fact you wrote the essay is immaterial, and you should effectively be as anonymous as a Wikipedia article's author(s). Although you don't go into detail about where you read an author using "I", my best guess is it was when they made a case for something of their own.
My recommendation is to use first-person pronouns only for attribution. If you do something original, such as a thesis or other research, it makes sense to use "we" for things you did with your supervisor, or "I" for what you managed on your own. It's important to examiners/reviewers to know what is one, what is the other and what is instead due to previous academics, and to be confident of your non-plagiaristic honesty on that front. Laurel's answer shows a number of style guides for such writing gives similar advice.
If your essay contains nothing original, such as when you give an overview of the arguments for and against philosophers' views on an issue, the fact you wrote the essay is immaterial, and you should effectively be as anonymous as a Wikipedia article's author(s). Although you don't go into detail about where you read an author using "I", my best guess is it was when they made a case for something of their own.
edited Feb 10 at 19:23
answered Feb 10 at 16:56
J.G.J.G.
7,26611733
7,26611733
1
The second paragraph hints at a reason that is grammatical. The I verb clauses on sentences are redundant with a single author and ambiguous if there are coauthors.
– Dan D.
Feb 11 at 12:59
@DanD Well, I can be necessary when contrasting with what third parties did, thought etc., while "first-person" pronouns include both I and we, and you'll sometimes need these with co-authors.
– J.G.
Feb 11 at 13:01
add a comment |
1
The second paragraph hints at a reason that is grammatical. The I verb clauses on sentences are redundant with a single author and ambiguous if there are coauthors.
– Dan D.
Feb 11 at 12:59
@DanD Well, I can be necessary when contrasting with what third parties did, thought etc., while "first-person" pronouns include both I and we, and you'll sometimes need these with co-authors.
– J.G.
Feb 11 at 13:01
1
1
The second paragraph hints at a reason that is grammatical. The I verb clauses on sentences are redundant with a single author and ambiguous if there are coauthors.
– Dan D.
Feb 11 at 12:59
The second paragraph hints at a reason that is grammatical. The I verb clauses on sentences are redundant with a single author and ambiguous if there are coauthors.
– Dan D.
Feb 11 at 12:59
@DanD Well, I can be necessary when contrasting with what third parties did, thought etc., while "first-person" pronouns include both I and we, and you'll sometimes need these with co-authors.
– J.G.
Feb 11 at 13:01
@DanD Well, I can be necessary when contrasting with what third parties did, thought etc., while "first-person" pronouns include both I and we, and you'll sometimes need these with co-authors.
– J.G.
Feb 11 at 13:01
add a comment |
Like with so many other issues of style, it depends on your audience.
For a school essay, your audience is your teacher. So write the essay your teacher wants, no matter if it's okay to do it another way elsewhere.
If you submit an essay or article for publication, the audience is the publisher, and you should follow its rules. A publisher curates for a larger audience and will have rules and expectations for authors that fit those needs.
Some academic essays need to be in first person. Imagine a college application essay written in 3rd person. I'm sure people have done it. I wouldn't advise it. If you're writing an essay to read out loud at a conference or other presentation, and it's about your work, you also need to use first person or it's just weird and confusing.
Figure out your audience and adjust your writing accordingly.
I had a number of classmates in college who wrote their college application essays in the 3rd person. While I don't know exactly what the issue was, the effectiveness of the technique was suggested by the fact that they were all going to the public college I was going to, which did not have a college application essay. I think there were a few people I met at my school who had said they'd used the first person on their application essays, so it clearly wasn't the only factor. But it was apparently a common practice among those who applied to prestigious schools and didn't get accepted.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:02
@EdGrimm Back in my day, college application essays were always things like "what is something that defines my character?" or "why I want to go to your school". I even once got "what animal would I be and why?" Writing anything like that in 3rd person would be completely nuts, IMHO. But maybe they got some questions where the topic could be in 3rd person? Or something that could go either way?
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:21
For all of the ones I even vaguely remember, the people who wrote them thought they were nuts to write in the third person, but did so anyway due to having learned in high school to always write in the third person.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:31
1
Oy vey. Talk about the wrong lessons to take away from high school. And ugh that their schools didn't have counselors to help with this stuff.
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:33
add a comment |
Like with so many other issues of style, it depends on your audience.
For a school essay, your audience is your teacher. So write the essay your teacher wants, no matter if it's okay to do it another way elsewhere.
If you submit an essay or article for publication, the audience is the publisher, and you should follow its rules. A publisher curates for a larger audience and will have rules and expectations for authors that fit those needs.
Some academic essays need to be in first person. Imagine a college application essay written in 3rd person. I'm sure people have done it. I wouldn't advise it. If you're writing an essay to read out loud at a conference or other presentation, and it's about your work, you also need to use first person or it's just weird and confusing.
Figure out your audience and adjust your writing accordingly.
I had a number of classmates in college who wrote their college application essays in the 3rd person. While I don't know exactly what the issue was, the effectiveness of the technique was suggested by the fact that they were all going to the public college I was going to, which did not have a college application essay. I think there were a few people I met at my school who had said they'd used the first person on their application essays, so it clearly wasn't the only factor. But it was apparently a common practice among those who applied to prestigious schools and didn't get accepted.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:02
@EdGrimm Back in my day, college application essays were always things like "what is something that defines my character?" or "why I want to go to your school". I even once got "what animal would I be and why?" Writing anything like that in 3rd person would be completely nuts, IMHO. But maybe they got some questions where the topic could be in 3rd person? Or something that could go either way?
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:21
For all of the ones I even vaguely remember, the people who wrote them thought they were nuts to write in the third person, but did so anyway due to having learned in high school to always write in the third person.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:31
1
Oy vey. Talk about the wrong lessons to take away from high school. And ugh that their schools didn't have counselors to help with this stuff.
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:33
add a comment |
Like with so many other issues of style, it depends on your audience.
For a school essay, your audience is your teacher. So write the essay your teacher wants, no matter if it's okay to do it another way elsewhere.
If you submit an essay or article for publication, the audience is the publisher, and you should follow its rules. A publisher curates for a larger audience and will have rules and expectations for authors that fit those needs.
Some academic essays need to be in first person. Imagine a college application essay written in 3rd person. I'm sure people have done it. I wouldn't advise it. If you're writing an essay to read out loud at a conference or other presentation, and it's about your work, you also need to use first person or it's just weird and confusing.
Figure out your audience and adjust your writing accordingly.
Like with so many other issues of style, it depends on your audience.
For a school essay, your audience is your teacher. So write the essay your teacher wants, no matter if it's okay to do it another way elsewhere.
If you submit an essay or article for publication, the audience is the publisher, and you should follow its rules. A publisher curates for a larger audience and will have rules and expectations for authors that fit those needs.
Some academic essays need to be in first person. Imagine a college application essay written in 3rd person. I'm sure people have done it. I wouldn't advise it. If you're writing an essay to read out loud at a conference or other presentation, and it's about your work, you also need to use first person or it's just weird and confusing.
Figure out your audience and adjust your writing accordingly.
answered Feb 10 at 23:35
CynCyn
18k13883
18k13883
I had a number of classmates in college who wrote their college application essays in the 3rd person. While I don't know exactly what the issue was, the effectiveness of the technique was suggested by the fact that they were all going to the public college I was going to, which did not have a college application essay. I think there were a few people I met at my school who had said they'd used the first person on their application essays, so it clearly wasn't the only factor. But it was apparently a common practice among those who applied to prestigious schools and didn't get accepted.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:02
@EdGrimm Back in my day, college application essays were always things like "what is something that defines my character?" or "why I want to go to your school". I even once got "what animal would I be and why?" Writing anything like that in 3rd person would be completely nuts, IMHO. But maybe they got some questions where the topic could be in 3rd person? Or something that could go either way?
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:21
For all of the ones I even vaguely remember, the people who wrote them thought they were nuts to write in the third person, but did so anyway due to having learned in high school to always write in the third person.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:31
1
Oy vey. Talk about the wrong lessons to take away from high school. And ugh that their schools didn't have counselors to help with this stuff.
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:33
add a comment |
I had a number of classmates in college who wrote their college application essays in the 3rd person. While I don't know exactly what the issue was, the effectiveness of the technique was suggested by the fact that they were all going to the public college I was going to, which did not have a college application essay. I think there were a few people I met at my school who had said they'd used the first person on their application essays, so it clearly wasn't the only factor. But it was apparently a common practice among those who applied to prestigious schools and didn't get accepted.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:02
@EdGrimm Back in my day, college application essays were always things like "what is something that defines my character?" or "why I want to go to your school". I even once got "what animal would I be and why?" Writing anything like that in 3rd person would be completely nuts, IMHO. But maybe they got some questions where the topic could be in 3rd person? Or something that could go either way?
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:21
For all of the ones I even vaguely remember, the people who wrote them thought they were nuts to write in the third person, but did so anyway due to having learned in high school to always write in the third person.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:31
1
Oy vey. Talk about the wrong lessons to take away from high school. And ugh that their schools didn't have counselors to help with this stuff.
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:33
I had a number of classmates in college who wrote their college application essays in the 3rd person. While I don't know exactly what the issue was, the effectiveness of the technique was suggested by the fact that they were all going to the public college I was going to, which did not have a college application essay. I think there were a few people I met at my school who had said they'd used the first person on their application essays, so it clearly wasn't the only factor. But it was apparently a common practice among those who applied to prestigious schools and didn't get accepted.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:02
I had a number of classmates in college who wrote their college application essays in the 3rd person. While I don't know exactly what the issue was, the effectiveness of the technique was suggested by the fact that they were all going to the public college I was going to, which did not have a college application essay. I think there were a few people I met at my school who had said they'd used the first person on their application essays, so it clearly wasn't the only factor. But it was apparently a common practice among those who applied to prestigious schools and didn't get accepted.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:02
@EdGrimm Back in my day, college application essays were always things like "what is something that defines my character?" or "why I want to go to your school". I even once got "what animal would I be and why?" Writing anything like that in 3rd person would be completely nuts, IMHO. But maybe they got some questions where the topic could be in 3rd person? Or something that could go either way?
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:21
@EdGrimm Back in my day, college application essays were always things like "what is something that defines my character?" or "why I want to go to your school". I even once got "what animal would I be and why?" Writing anything like that in 3rd person would be completely nuts, IMHO. But maybe they got some questions where the topic could be in 3rd person? Or something that could go either way?
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:21
For all of the ones I even vaguely remember, the people who wrote them thought they were nuts to write in the third person, but did so anyway due to having learned in high school to always write in the third person.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:31
For all of the ones I even vaguely remember, the people who wrote them thought they were nuts to write in the third person, but did so anyway due to having learned in high school to always write in the third person.
– Ed Grimm
Feb 12 at 2:31
1
1
Oy vey. Talk about the wrong lessons to take away from high school. And ugh that their schools didn't have counselors to help with this stuff.
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:33
Oy vey. Talk about the wrong lessons to take away from high school. And ugh that their schools didn't have counselors to help with this stuff.
– Cyn
Feb 12 at 2:33
add a comment |
The restrictions on 1st person (singular or plural) does depend on:
- The genre of writing
- The style guide being followed
- The opinion of the teacher/instructor/advisor/publisher/editor
- The context within the paper
Genre of Writing
Generally speaking, it is research writing that tends to favor not using 1st person. The reason for this is that research ought to be objective, not subjective, and too many inexperienced students (i.e. college undergraduates or younger, though even some graduates) doing research writing tend to write opinion, rather than properly researched and documented facts. So for these types of students, it is often safest for a teacher to say avoid 1st person. This helps force the student not to be thinking about what they "believe," but rather what they can "prove" via their research.
Style Guides
Style guides vary on what is allowed, but generally have some similar ideas. For instance, The Concise Rules of APA, 6th edition (2010) states for an appropriate use of 1st person (bold added):
Innappropriately or illogically attributing action in an effort to be objective can be misleading. ... To avoid ambiguity, use a personal pronoun rather than the third person when describing steps taken in your experiment.
Correct:
We reviewed the literature.
Incorrect:
The authors reviewed the literature. (sec. 1.09, pp. 19-20)
But then further clarifies use (bold added):
For clarity, restrict your use of we to refer only to yourself and your coauthors (use I if you are the sole author of the paper). Broader uses of we may leave your readers wondering to whom you are referring. (sec. 1.09, p. 20)
So in short, don't include in a "we" (1) the readers, (2) other people in the field of study who did not author the paper with you.
Similarly, A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations, 9th edition (2018), which tends to follow The Chicago Manual of Style in a lot of respects, says the following about avoiding 1st person (bold added):
Most instructors and editors do agree that two uses of I should be avoided:
- Insecure writers begin too many sentences with I think or I believe (or their equivalent, In my opinion). Readers assume that you think and believe what you write, so you don't have to say you do.
- Inexperienced writers too often narrate their research: First I consulted ..., then I examined ..., and so on. Reader care less about the story of your research than about its results. (sec. 11.1.7, p. 120)
And then later notes two more with respect to the 1st person plural as well:
But many instructors and editors object to other uses of we:
- the royal we used to refer reflexively to the writer
- the all-purpose we that refers to people in general (sec. 11.1.7, p. 121)
Between the above inappropriate uses, the manual notes some positive uses:
The first person is appropriate on two occasions ...
- An occasional introductory I (or we) believe can soften the dogmatic edge of a statement ... The trick is not to hedge so often that you sound uncertain or so rarely that you sound smug.
- ... when it's the subject of a verb naming an action unique to you as the writer of your argument. Verbs referring to such actions typically appear in introductions (I will show/argue/prove/claim that X) and in conclusions (I have demonstrated/concluded that Y). Since only you can show, prove, or claim what's in your argument, only you can say so with I. ... On the other hand, researchers rarely use the first person for an action that others must repeat to replicate their research. Those words include divide, measure, weigh, examine, and so on. ... Those same principles apply to we, if you're one of two or more authors. (sec. 11.1.7, pp. 120-121)
Authority's Opinion
Style guides give some "allowance," but whoever an author is writing for has ultimate say on what precisely is allowed. This is generally noted in the style guides as well.
For instance, the second bullet point in the preceding quote about "appropriate" uses would not be a valid use by a number of people in authority who believe such metadiscourse (or signposting) that gives a discussion of what the author "will do" in the paper is bad writing for a couple of reasons: (1) regarding whether an author "proves" the point or not is up to the reader, whether the author believes it was proven or not; (2) what the author is showing, arguing, claiming, etc., should be evident within good writing without it being explicitly stated.
The point, however, is that the one the author is writing for (whether a class or a publication) determines the appropriate uses of 1st person; the author just needs to follow the rules laid down.
Context within the Paper
This relates directly to the caveats noted in the style guide section above, and also relates to the authority's acceptance or not. Some places in a paper may be appropriate to use 1st person, other places not. If an author is giving a personal illustration, it would be appropriate; but in a research paper, a personal illustration is generally not often used (since it cannot be verified; it is subjective). So whether or not it is allowed in a particular place will no doubt depend much on the context within the paper itself.
add a comment |
The restrictions on 1st person (singular or plural) does depend on:
- The genre of writing
- The style guide being followed
- The opinion of the teacher/instructor/advisor/publisher/editor
- The context within the paper
Genre of Writing
Generally speaking, it is research writing that tends to favor not using 1st person. The reason for this is that research ought to be objective, not subjective, and too many inexperienced students (i.e. college undergraduates or younger, though even some graduates) doing research writing tend to write opinion, rather than properly researched and documented facts. So for these types of students, it is often safest for a teacher to say avoid 1st person. This helps force the student not to be thinking about what they "believe," but rather what they can "prove" via their research.
Style Guides
Style guides vary on what is allowed, but generally have some similar ideas. For instance, The Concise Rules of APA, 6th edition (2010) states for an appropriate use of 1st person (bold added):
Innappropriately or illogically attributing action in an effort to be objective can be misleading. ... To avoid ambiguity, use a personal pronoun rather than the third person when describing steps taken in your experiment.
Correct:
We reviewed the literature.
Incorrect:
The authors reviewed the literature. (sec. 1.09, pp. 19-20)
But then further clarifies use (bold added):
For clarity, restrict your use of we to refer only to yourself and your coauthors (use I if you are the sole author of the paper). Broader uses of we may leave your readers wondering to whom you are referring. (sec. 1.09, p. 20)
So in short, don't include in a "we" (1) the readers, (2) other people in the field of study who did not author the paper with you.
Similarly, A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations, 9th edition (2018), which tends to follow The Chicago Manual of Style in a lot of respects, says the following about avoiding 1st person (bold added):
Most instructors and editors do agree that two uses of I should be avoided:
- Insecure writers begin too many sentences with I think or I believe (or their equivalent, In my opinion). Readers assume that you think and believe what you write, so you don't have to say you do.
- Inexperienced writers too often narrate their research: First I consulted ..., then I examined ..., and so on. Reader care less about the story of your research than about its results. (sec. 11.1.7, p. 120)
And then later notes two more with respect to the 1st person plural as well:
But many instructors and editors object to other uses of we:
- the royal we used to refer reflexively to the writer
- the all-purpose we that refers to people in general (sec. 11.1.7, p. 121)
Between the above inappropriate uses, the manual notes some positive uses:
The first person is appropriate on two occasions ...
- An occasional introductory I (or we) believe can soften the dogmatic edge of a statement ... The trick is not to hedge so often that you sound uncertain or so rarely that you sound smug.
- ... when it's the subject of a verb naming an action unique to you as the writer of your argument. Verbs referring to such actions typically appear in introductions (I will show/argue/prove/claim that X) and in conclusions (I have demonstrated/concluded that Y). Since only you can show, prove, or claim what's in your argument, only you can say so with I. ... On the other hand, researchers rarely use the first person for an action that others must repeat to replicate their research. Those words include divide, measure, weigh, examine, and so on. ... Those same principles apply to we, if you're one of two or more authors. (sec. 11.1.7, pp. 120-121)
Authority's Opinion
Style guides give some "allowance," but whoever an author is writing for has ultimate say on what precisely is allowed. This is generally noted in the style guides as well.
For instance, the second bullet point in the preceding quote about "appropriate" uses would not be a valid use by a number of people in authority who believe such metadiscourse (or signposting) that gives a discussion of what the author "will do" in the paper is bad writing for a couple of reasons: (1) regarding whether an author "proves" the point or not is up to the reader, whether the author believes it was proven or not; (2) what the author is showing, arguing, claiming, etc., should be evident within good writing without it being explicitly stated.
The point, however, is that the one the author is writing for (whether a class or a publication) determines the appropriate uses of 1st person; the author just needs to follow the rules laid down.
Context within the Paper
This relates directly to the caveats noted in the style guide section above, and also relates to the authority's acceptance or not. Some places in a paper may be appropriate to use 1st person, other places not. If an author is giving a personal illustration, it would be appropriate; but in a research paper, a personal illustration is generally not often used (since it cannot be verified; it is subjective). So whether or not it is allowed in a particular place will no doubt depend much on the context within the paper itself.
add a comment |
The restrictions on 1st person (singular or plural) does depend on:
- The genre of writing
- The style guide being followed
- The opinion of the teacher/instructor/advisor/publisher/editor
- The context within the paper
Genre of Writing
Generally speaking, it is research writing that tends to favor not using 1st person. The reason for this is that research ought to be objective, not subjective, and too many inexperienced students (i.e. college undergraduates or younger, though even some graduates) doing research writing tend to write opinion, rather than properly researched and documented facts. So for these types of students, it is often safest for a teacher to say avoid 1st person. This helps force the student not to be thinking about what they "believe," but rather what they can "prove" via their research.
Style Guides
Style guides vary on what is allowed, but generally have some similar ideas. For instance, The Concise Rules of APA, 6th edition (2010) states for an appropriate use of 1st person (bold added):
Innappropriately or illogically attributing action in an effort to be objective can be misleading. ... To avoid ambiguity, use a personal pronoun rather than the third person when describing steps taken in your experiment.
Correct:
We reviewed the literature.
Incorrect:
The authors reviewed the literature. (sec. 1.09, pp. 19-20)
But then further clarifies use (bold added):
For clarity, restrict your use of we to refer only to yourself and your coauthors (use I if you are the sole author of the paper). Broader uses of we may leave your readers wondering to whom you are referring. (sec. 1.09, p. 20)
So in short, don't include in a "we" (1) the readers, (2) other people in the field of study who did not author the paper with you.
Similarly, A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations, 9th edition (2018), which tends to follow The Chicago Manual of Style in a lot of respects, says the following about avoiding 1st person (bold added):
Most instructors and editors do agree that two uses of I should be avoided:
- Insecure writers begin too many sentences with I think or I believe (or their equivalent, In my opinion). Readers assume that you think and believe what you write, so you don't have to say you do.
- Inexperienced writers too often narrate their research: First I consulted ..., then I examined ..., and so on. Reader care less about the story of your research than about its results. (sec. 11.1.7, p. 120)
And then later notes two more with respect to the 1st person plural as well:
But many instructors and editors object to other uses of we:
- the royal we used to refer reflexively to the writer
- the all-purpose we that refers to people in general (sec. 11.1.7, p. 121)
Between the above inappropriate uses, the manual notes some positive uses:
The first person is appropriate on two occasions ...
- An occasional introductory I (or we) believe can soften the dogmatic edge of a statement ... The trick is not to hedge so often that you sound uncertain or so rarely that you sound smug.
- ... when it's the subject of a verb naming an action unique to you as the writer of your argument. Verbs referring to such actions typically appear in introductions (I will show/argue/prove/claim that X) and in conclusions (I have demonstrated/concluded that Y). Since only you can show, prove, or claim what's in your argument, only you can say so with I. ... On the other hand, researchers rarely use the first person for an action that others must repeat to replicate their research. Those words include divide, measure, weigh, examine, and so on. ... Those same principles apply to we, if you're one of two or more authors. (sec. 11.1.7, pp. 120-121)
Authority's Opinion
Style guides give some "allowance," but whoever an author is writing for has ultimate say on what precisely is allowed. This is generally noted in the style guides as well.
For instance, the second bullet point in the preceding quote about "appropriate" uses would not be a valid use by a number of people in authority who believe such metadiscourse (or signposting) that gives a discussion of what the author "will do" in the paper is bad writing for a couple of reasons: (1) regarding whether an author "proves" the point or not is up to the reader, whether the author believes it was proven or not; (2) what the author is showing, arguing, claiming, etc., should be evident within good writing without it being explicitly stated.
The point, however, is that the one the author is writing for (whether a class or a publication) determines the appropriate uses of 1st person; the author just needs to follow the rules laid down.
Context within the Paper
This relates directly to the caveats noted in the style guide section above, and also relates to the authority's acceptance or not. Some places in a paper may be appropriate to use 1st person, other places not. If an author is giving a personal illustration, it would be appropriate; but in a research paper, a personal illustration is generally not often used (since it cannot be verified; it is subjective). So whether or not it is allowed in a particular place will no doubt depend much on the context within the paper itself.
The restrictions on 1st person (singular or plural) does depend on:
- The genre of writing
- The style guide being followed
- The opinion of the teacher/instructor/advisor/publisher/editor
- The context within the paper
Genre of Writing
Generally speaking, it is research writing that tends to favor not using 1st person. The reason for this is that research ought to be objective, not subjective, and too many inexperienced students (i.e. college undergraduates or younger, though even some graduates) doing research writing tend to write opinion, rather than properly researched and documented facts. So for these types of students, it is often safest for a teacher to say avoid 1st person. This helps force the student not to be thinking about what they "believe," but rather what they can "prove" via their research.
Style Guides
Style guides vary on what is allowed, but generally have some similar ideas. For instance, The Concise Rules of APA, 6th edition (2010) states for an appropriate use of 1st person (bold added):
Innappropriately or illogically attributing action in an effort to be objective can be misleading. ... To avoid ambiguity, use a personal pronoun rather than the third person when describing steps taken in your experiment.
Correct:
We reviewed the literature.
Incorrect:
The authors reviewed the literature. (sec. 1.09, pp. 19-20)
But then further clarifies use (bold added):
For clarity, restrict your use of we to refer only to yourself and your coauthors (use I if you are the sole author of the paper). Broader uses of we may leave your readers wondering to whom you are referring. (sec. 1.09, p. 20)
So in short, don't include in a "we" (1) the readers, (2) other people in the field of study who did not author the paper with you.
Similarly, A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations, 9th edition (2018), which tends to follow The Chicago Manual of Style in a lot of respects, says the following about avoiding 1st person (bold added):
Most instructors and editors do agree that two uses of I should be avoided:
- Insecure writers begin too many sentences with I think or I believe (or their equivalent, In my opinion). Readers assume that you think and believe what you write, so you don't have to say you do.
- Inexperienced writers too often narrate their research: First I consulted ..., then I examined ..., and so on. Reader care less about the story of your research than about its results. (sec. 11.1.7, p. 120)
And then later notes two more with respect to the 1st person plural as well:
But many instructors and editors object to other uses of we:
- the royal we used to refer reflexively to the writer
- the all-purpose we that refers to people in general (sec. 11.1.7, p. 121)
Between the above inappropriate uses, the manual notes some positive uses:
The first person is appropriate on two occasions ...
- An occasional introductory I (or we) believe can soften the dogmatic edge of a statement ... The trick is not to hedge so often that you sound uncertain or so rarely that you sound smug.
- ... when it's the subject of a verb naming an action unique to you as the writer of your argument. Verbs referring to such actions typically appear in introductions (I will show/argue/prove/claim that X) and in conclusions (I have demonstrated/concluded that Y). Since only you can show, prove, or claim what's in your argument, only you can say so with I. ... On the other hand, researchers rarely use the first person for an action that others must repeat to replicate their research. Those words include divide, measure, weigh, examine, and so on. ... Those same principles apply to we, if you're one of two or more authors. (sec. 11.1.7, pp. 120-121)
Authority's Opinion
Style guides give some "allowance," but whoever an author is writing for has ultimate say on what precisely is allowed. This is generally noted in the style guides as well.
For instance, the second bullet point in the preceding quote about "appropriate" uses would not be a valid use by a number of people in authority who believe such metadiscourse (or signposting) that gives a discussion of what the author "will do" in the paper is bad writing for a couple of reasons: (1) regarding whether an author "proves" the point or not is up to the reader, whether the author believes it was proven or not; (2) what the author is showing, arguing, claiming, etc., should be evident within good writing without it being explicitly stated.
The point, however, is that the one the author is writing for (whether a class or a publication) determines the appropriate uses of 1st person; the author just needs to follow the rules laid down.
Context within the Paper
This relates directly to the caveats noted in the style guide section above, and also relates to the authority's acceptance or not. Some places in a paper may be appropriate to use 1st person, other places not. If an author is giving a personal illustration, it would be appropriate; but in a research paper, a personal illustration is generally not often used (since it cannot be verified; it is subjective). So whether or not it is allowed in a particular place will no doubt depend much on the context within the paper itself.
edited Feb 15 at 18:22
answered Feb 15 at 18:04
ScottSScottS
50126
50126
add a comment |
add a comment |
I will try to convey the request and explanation of one of my professors. He specifically asked me to change generic speaking to 1st person singular.
(His) explanation:
It is OK to use generic speaking or 3rd person if you talk about
something that is generally known, or it was published / researched by
somebody else. But if you describe your own work, it is confusing to
use anything else than 1st person singular.
It was very reasonable (and very awkward - to learn to take responsibility and credit for my own work), but it became my own thinking meanwhile.
add a comment |
I will try to convey the request and explanation of one of my professors. He specifically asked me to change generic speaking to 1st person singular.
(His) explanation:
It is OK to use generic speaking or 3rd person if you talk about
something that is generally known, or it was published / researched by
somebody else. But if you describe your own work, it is confusing to
use anything else than 1st person singular.
It was very reasonable (and very awkward - to learn to take responsibility and credit for my own work), but it became my own thinking meanwhile.
add a comment |
I will try to convey the request and explanation of one of my professors. He specifically asked me to change generic speaking to 1st person singular.
(His) explanation:
It is OK to use generic speaking or 3rd person if you talk about
something that is generally known, or it was published / researched by
somebody else. But if you describe your own work, it is confusing to
use anything else than 1st person singular.
It was very reasonable (and very awkward - to learn to take responsibility and credit for my own work), but it became my own thinking meanwhile.
I will try to convey the request and explanation of one of my professors. He specifically asked me to change generic speaking to 1st person singular.
(His) explanation:
It is OK to use generic speaking or 3rd person if you talk about
something that is generally known, or it was published / researched by
somebody else. But if you describe your own work, it is confusing to
use anything else than 1st person singular.
It was very reasonable (and very awkward - to learn to take responsibility and credit for my own work), but it became my own thinking meanwhile.
edited Feb 11 at 9:46
Galastel
38.1k6114203
38.1k6114203
answered Feb 11 at 8:55
virolinovirolino
1011
1011
add a comment |
add a comment |
It depends on what your goal is. If your essay is supposed to say something about the world in general, you should maybe avoid the first person, because that could make it seem as if your essay's conclusions are based on a sample size of one, which would detract from its validity.
On the other hand, if you want to share something you personally accomplished, or discovered, or witnessed, then using the first person could add validity to your essay, because hey, you were there, right?
add a comment |
It depends on what your goal is. If your essay is supposed to say something about the world in general, you should maybe avoid the first person, because that could make it seem as if your essay's conclusions are based on a sample size of one, which would detract from its validity.
On the other hand, if you want to share something you personally accomplished, or discovered, or witnessed, then using the first person could add validity to your essay, because hey, you were there, right?
add a comment |
It depends on what your goal is. If your essay is supposed to say something about the world in general, you should maybe avoid the first person, because that could make it seem as if your essay's conclusions are based on a sample size of one, which would detract from its validity.
On the other hand, if you want to share something you personally accomplished, or discovered, or witnessed, then using the first person could add validity to your essay, because hey, you were there, right?
It depends on what your goal is. If your essay is supposed to say something about the world in general, you should maybe avoid the first person, because that could make it seem as if your essay's conclusions are based on a sample size of one, which would detract from its validity.
On the other hand, if you want to share something you personally accomplished, or discovered, or witnessed, then using the first person could add validity to your essay, because hey, you were there, right?
answered Feb 11 at 17:27
Zephyr VendevalZephyr Vendeval
1
1
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add a comment |
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Are you sure that your teachers haven’t confused first person and first person singular?
– Wrzlprmft
Feb 10 at 20:41
I removed [technical-writing] because it is specifically about creating documentation, not essays (even though the term is used for essays outside of Writing.SE).
– Cyn
Feb 10 at 23:37