Yeah, that'd be good, if that's alright 
Okay, so the dissociation (ionisation) of an acid is an equilibrium reaction, ie it can go forwards and backwards.

where A represents the Acid.
For strong acids, such as HCl, the reaction goes forward a lot (for lack of a better word) so almost all of the acid dissociates.
For weak acids, such as CH3COOH, the reaction does not go forward "as much" so only some of the acid dissociates.
How do we measure this? With K
aSkipping just a bit of equilibrium theory, I'll just jump straight to the equation

Using experimental data at
25°C (this is important), you can work out the concentration of H
3O
+, A
- and HA in the resulting solution. You can see, that for strong acids they have high K
a since there is a very low concentration of HA (un-ionised) acid in the final solution. For weak acids, the majority is left not ionised, so there is a high concentration of HA hence low K
Hope that clears things up a bit!