Adding to what Jazz has said...
One reason that redox reactions can be confusing is that it is not obvious that electrons are being lost or gained. This is one advantage of looking at half-equations that make this clearer. Also, the gain or loss of electrons can occur by transferring atoms.
Consider the oxidation of ethanol by dichromate. The oxidation reaction is:
CH3CH2OH + H2O -----> CH3COOH + 4H+ + 4e-
and so we can see that the gain of an O atom and the loss of two H atoms from ethanol (net) has led to electrons as a product and confirming that the process is an oxidation. Now, we can't go and get a bottle of electrons nor can we have electrons just hanging around unbound in a reaction, so we need a second process (reduction) that gains electrons to balance out the process. In this case, that process is:
Cr2O72- + 14H+ + 6e- -----> 2Cr3++ 7H2O
The chromium centre in the dichromate ion Cr
2O
72- has chromium in a formal Cr
6+ state that is gaining electrons in becoming the Cr
3+, taking up the electrons lost in the oxidation. The stoichiometry of the overall process can be found by adding these half-equations by balancing the electrons. So, by looking at 2 x RED + 3 x OX:
2Cr2O72- + 28H+ + 12e- + 3CH3CH2OH + 3H2O -----> 4Cr3++ 14H2O + 3CH3COOH + 12H+ + 12e-
and then cancelling the duplicates:
3CH3CH2OH + 2Cr2O72- + 16H+ -----> 3CH3COOH + 4Cr3++ 11H2O
We see that the reaction requires two dichromate ions for every three ethanol molecules plus quite a bit of acid.
As Jazz said, the dichromate ion and the acid are consumed / transformed in the reaction and so are not catalysts. Furthermore, they are directly involved in the reaction as the intermediates in the process include chromate esters of ethanol with structures like CH
3CH
2O-CrO
32-. These are formed as part of transferring the extra O atoms to make the carboxyl groups.