Megan Byard's I-Search Blog
Friday, March 15, 2013
Narrative Poem
She always stands there and smiles
No matter how bad the pain
It could go on for miles
The red on her arms like a stain
Afraid and ashamed
She never lets it show
She’ll never be exactly the same
The smile never leaves her face
She just wants to be saved
From the pain that makes her world a bitter, dark place
I wish I could help her
Take away the pain
But it was too late to help her
The disease already ran through her veins
We hear her cry at night
She just tells us to hush
Will she ever be alright?
It makes her cry
Her life used to be free and breezy
What did she do to deserve this? Why?
Every single night
Hearing her in pain kills me
I just want it all to be alright
Hearing the sound
What she had searched
Had finally been found
Not in as much pain
She believes it is all going to be better
Hoping everything has changed
And she is still alright
Oh, God, why?
Here begins another fight
Thought the pain was all gone
She was such a strong believer
Now she feels so alone
Why does she have to suffer so
It’s not a game she played
She just wanted the pain to go
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Research Memo
Megan
Byard
Ms.
McKoy
English
II
21
February 2013
Dealing Lupus: Fighting an autoimmune disease
Hypothesis:
How many people know about Lupus? Does anyone even know what Lupus is? I
believe that not many people know about Lupus at all. I believe teenagers,
especially, don’t know anything about Lupus. So how many people really know
about Lupus and how can we raise awareness about it?
Context: My targeted
audience was people in their early teens to about their mid-twenties. I chose
these respondents to prove my hypothesis and how not many younger people know
about Lupus. I discovered in my pilot testing that my hypothesis was correct.
My results are reliable and valid. I know this because when people where taking
the survey, they were not asking other people questions about what Lupus was.
No my survey was not skewed or biased.
Results:
Age
|
14-19 (22
participants)
|
20-25 (0
participants)
|
26-30 (2
participants)
|
31-36 (0
participants)
|
37+ (1
participant)
|
Gender
|
Male (3
participants)
|
Female (22
participants)
|
|||
Race
|
Caucasian (18 participants)
|
African American (2 participants)
|
Asian (1
participant)
|
Hispanic (3 participants)
|
Other (1
participant)
|
Do you know what Lupus is?
|
Yes
(4 participants)
|
No (13
participants)
|
Somewhat (8 participants)
|
||
What is it?
|
Disease (4 participants)
|
I thought it was a kind of
depression or mental disease that also affects the body. (1
participant)
|
A disease that affects the
immune system and damages tissue. (1 participant)
|
Autoimmune disease. (2
participants)
|
|
Do you, or someone you know,
have Lupus?
|
Yes (7 participants)
|
No (10 participants)
|
I’m not sure (8
participants)
|
||
If so, who?
|
Friend (2
participants)
|
Man from church (1 participant)
|
Client (1
participant)
|
Mother (2
participants)
|
Themselves (1 participant)
|
How were they affected?
|
Death (2
participants)
|
In-and-out of the hospital (1 participant)
|
Always cold, purple hands (1 participant)
|
Rash and body weakness (1 participant)
|
N/A (1
participant)
|
How important do you think
Lupus is on a scale of 1-10?
|
1 (1)
2 (0)
|
3 (0)
4 (1)
|
5 (6)
6 (2)
|
7 (5)
8 (3)
|
9 (1)
10 (6)
|
Who do you think is more likely
to have Lupus?
|
Men (4 participants)
|
Women (21 participants)
|
Conclusion: When I was
preforming my survey and placing the results into the chart above, I learned
that my hypothesis was indeed correct! I learned that 12/25 participants know
or have some minimal idea of what Lupus is and how people who have it are
affected. 13/25 people, which is obviously more than 12/25 people, is the
amount of participants that have no clue what lupus is and they were all in the
14-19 age range.
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Survey Results
Survey Results
Age
|
14-19 (22
participants)
|
20-25 (0
participants)
|
26-30 (2
participants)
|
31-36 (0
participants)
|
37+ (1
participant)
|
Gender
|
Male (3
participants)
|
Female (22
participants)
|
|||
Race
|
Caucasian (18 participants)
|
African American (2 participants)
|
Asian (1
participant)
|
Hispanic (3 participants)
|
Other (1
participant)
|
Do you know what Lupus is?
|
Yes
(4 participants)
|
No (13
participants)
|
Somewhat (8 participants)
|
||
What is it?
|
Disease (4 participants)
|
I thought it was a kind of
depression or mental disease that also affects the body. (1
participant)
|
A disease that affects the
immune system and damages tissue. (1 participant)
|
Autoimmune disease. (2
participants)
|
|
Do you, or someone you know,
have Lupus?
|
Yes (7 participants)
|
No (10 participants)
|
I’m not sure (8
participants)
|
||
If so, who?
|
Friend (2
participants)
|
Man from church (1 participant)
|
Client (1
participant)
|
Mother (2
participants)
|
Themselves (1 participant)
|
How were they affected?
|
Death (2
participants)
|
In-and-out of the hospital (1 participant)
|
Always cold, purple hands (1 participant)
|
Rash and body weakness (1 participant)
|
N/A (1
participant)
|
How important do you think
Lupus is on a scale of 1-10?
|
1 (1)
2 (0)
|
3 (0)
4 (1)
|
5 (6)
6 (2)
|
7 (5)
8 (3)
|
9 (1)
10 (6)
|
Who do you think is more likely
to have Lupus?
|
Men (4 participants)
|
Women (21 participants)
|
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