I was going to type out a long response, but I cba right now. I wrote a report on what causes lift for a school report (high-school equivalent, so nothing too strenuous

) a year or so ago, if you want a copy send me a PM. basically, many of the theories floating around are wrong, such as the Bernoulli one, the 'skipping stone' one and the 'Venturi nozzle' as well. However, a large amount of lift is made by 'flow turning' (i.e. the air which is moving horizontally relative to the wing is deflected by the wing, and given a downward component of velocity. The downward acceleration of the air is what produces the force) and also by the circulation of air around the wing (I kinda suck at putting this into words, but for reasons I've forgotten, when a wing (or just flat piece of material) moves through the air, a circulation pattern is set up (but due to the high speed of the wing relative to the air mass, the resultant effect is that the velocity is lower on the bottom of the wing, and higher on the top, and therefore the pressure is higher on bottom & lower on top) and because of this there's a net upwards force).
if you want a superb website to begin understanding aerodynamics, here's where you should start, IMO:
http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/bga.html