David Klak is for sure a reader, but not in the way most people are. David is someone who thoroughly enjoys reading play and musical scripts as the visuals behind doing a show helps him see the story unfolding. David learned to read the most mainstream way. A mix of visually watching words while being read to and practice in elementary. David believes that people read because it brings readers into a different reality, to educate themselves, and to take on the view of a different personality. David believes that in order to be a good reader, someone must have the determination to read every word and take it all in, for if some words are missed, the reader loses a little bit of what there was to experience. David thinks that the only thing that makes reading easy to its reader is a genuine interest in what they're reading, meaning the hardest part is having lack of interest, and lack of interest means lack of attention. The qualities David finds in a good book are very interesting characters in the strangest of dilemmas. A character must have something about them that makes a reader like David want to know what's going to happen to them. David doesn't read much on his own as he is more of an audible and visual type learner. Overall, David thinks reading is important for society, but not his first method of media he prefers.
David Klak is a writer, but once again, not like most people. David learned how to write basic letters at a young age and when he knew how to spell it, he would want to write as many times as he could until his arm got tired. David believes that people write to maybe express their own emotions, let out their creativity, to pass on a message that means something to them to name a few reasons. To David, all a person needs to know to write is proper spelling, sentence structure, and an idea to write in the first place. Sometimes, for fun, David likes to write little scripts and one act plays to let out some creativity and see if it goes anywhere. Ideas for what to write about can vary from what David or someone else is going through, or possibly what's going on in the real world can inspire him from political issues to social tensions. A little constructive criticism can mean a lot to David, because since he would then know what needed to be fixed and use it for future reference. David doesn't write much at home during the school year due to all the different extra-curricular activities he involves himself in, but on an slow summer day, sometimes he'll just say "Why not?" and jot something down. David doesn't think too much of what he writes but hopes for it to expand into something bigger in the future.
David Klak is a writer, but once again, not like most people. David learned how to write basic letters at a young age and when he knew how to spell it, he would want to write as many times as he could until his arm got tired. David believes that people write to maybe express their own emotions, let out their creativity, to pass on a message that means something to them to name a few reasons. To David, all a person needs to know to write is proper spelling, sentence structure, and an idea to write in the first place. Sometimes, for fun, David likes to write little scripts and one act plays to let out some creativity and see if it goes anywhere. Ideas for what to write about can vary from what David or someone else is going through, or possibly what's going on in the real world can inspire him from political issues to social tensions. A little constructive criticism can mean a lot to David, because since he would then know what needed to be fixed and use it for future reference. David doesn't write much at home during the school year due to all the different extra-curricular activities he involves himself in, but on an slow summer day, sometimes he'll just say "Why not?" and jot something down. David doesn't think too much of what he writes but hopes for it to expand into something bigger in the future.