"MapStory empowers a global community to organize knowledge about the world spatially and temporally. With MapStory, people of all kinds turn into Storytellers who can create, share, and collaborate on MapStories and ultimately improve our understanding of global dynamics, worldwide, over the course of history."
Visual writing prompts with text and questions to get your students thinking.
A set of videos of classic book titles, such as The Very Hungry Caterpillar and Green Ham and Eggs.
Teach students storyboarding, a generator from the Australian Centre for the Moving Image.
"An online story and comic-creator which allows students to create comic scenes and stories, as well as animated movies, cards, drawings, doodles, and pictures. Educators are able to sign up for a class account and assign usernames and passwords for each student to have their own individual accounts. There are no ads or inappropriate content and the art work is fun and lively. Finished products may be saved, printed, or emailed."
"Allows you to create online books using a plethora of characters, scenes, and props. Teachers can, for free, create classes to register students so they each have their own account. As of this writing, there does not seem to be a limit as to how many student accounts you can create."
A BBC that helps young learners plan and write stories.
Creaza is a superb suite of tools including a audio and movie maker/editor, a cartoon maker, mindmapping and many others. A must have resource.
A collection of 12 Aboriginal dreamtime stories collected from the Wugullar (Beswick) Community in Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory, Australia.
The concept of using a Wiki for collaborative storytelling is worth the browse. A member can begin or edit a story, poem, plot, or character description. There's also a 3-Word Story that's doing the rounds right now. Each author can add just add three words to prolong the story. Of course, the words have to make sense so that others can add to it and continue the narration.