6Greg P. Kearsley. Questions and question asking in verbal discourse: A cross-disciplinary review[J] 1976,Journal of Psycholinguistic Research(4):355~375
3[1]Krashen. S. The Input Hypothesis: Issues and Implication[M]. London: Longman, 1985.
4[2]Long. M.H. Native Speakers/non - native Speaker Conversation and the Negotiation of Comprehensible Input [ J ].Applied Linguistics, Vol 4, 1983:126 - 141.
5[3]Nunan. D. Understanding Language Classrooms[M]. Prentice Hall, 1989.
6[4]Long, M.H. & C. J. Sato. Classroom Foreigner Talk Discourse: Forms and Functions of teachers' Questions[ A].1983. In H. Selinger & M. Long (eds.). Classroom Oriented Research in Second Language Acquisition[C]. Rowley, Mass: Newbury House.
7[5]Richards, J. & Lockhart, C. Reflective Teaching in Second Language Classroom. London: CPU, 1994.
8[6]Bames. D. Language in the Secondary Classroom[C]. in Barnes et al. (eds. )1969:9- 77.
9[7]Yan Wenjun. On Questioning Behaviours[J]. Teaching English in China. Beijing: Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press, Vol. 25, 2002: 13- 16.
10David Gardner, Lindsay Miller. Establishing Self-Access-From Theory to Practice[M]. Cambridge University Press. 1999.
4Cekaite A & Aronsson K. Language play, a collaborative resource in children's L2 learning [J]. Applied Linguistics, 2005, (2): 169-191.
5Gui Min. Vygotsky's sociocultural theory and the role of input and output in second language acquisition[J]. CEL EA Journal, 2006, (4): 87-92.
6Lantolf J P. Sociocultural theory and second language learning: Introduction to the special issue[J]. The Modem Language Journal, 1994, 78(4): 418-420.
7Liebscher G. Learner code-switching in the content-based foreign language classroom [J]. The Modem Language Journal, 2005, (2): 234-247.
8Vygotsky, L. 8. Thought and Language[M]. A kozulin ed.Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1987.