
World Cultures & Youth (Canada: Spread Your Wings) also known as Anessi in the Kingdom Of Tonga ParkerĪncient Paestum: City of the Greeks and Romans World Cultures & Youth (Canada: Spread Your Wings) also known as Through Amy's Eyesĭavid A. The Americans with Disabilities Act: New Access to the Workplace WilkinĪmerica's Story: Abraham Lincoln (Abe Lincoln)Īmerican Indians Before European Settlementĭecember 23, 1953, revised 2nd version 1975Īmerican Literature: Early National PeriodĪmerican Revolution: The Background Periodĭavid A. Smart (producer) Ted Peshak consultant: Elizabeth B. (Christianson Productions) Joel Marks (producer) David Christiansonĭavid A. Orin CornettĪlgebra: Relations, Functions and Variation FreemanĪlcohol and Tobacco: What They Do to Our BodiesĪlexander the Great and the Hellenistic AgeĪlgebra in Everyday Life (A Way of Thinking About Numbers)ĭavid A. January 31, 1956, revised 2nd edition 1979Īge of Discovery: Spanish and Portuguese Discoveryĭavid A.

Bookwalter & Otto RyserĪge of Discovery: English, French and Dutch Explorations

Smart (producer) Elmer Louis Kayserĭavid A. Major credits (mostly advisers prior to '70s)Ībraham Lincoln: A Background Study (The Boyhood of Abraham Lincoln)ĭavid A. In most cases, additional information is provided in the "year / copyright date" column. Those titles involving more serious edit changes or actual re-filming are listed as separate titles. Quite often, only the newest edition of a film is available today. This was especially true in the 1970s, when classrooms demanded more stimulating cinematic lectures. It was quite common for a film to be re-released as a "2nd edition" with only minor changes in the edit and a different soundtrack, with music and narration styles changed to fit the changing times.

Also included are those Centron Corporation titles released when Coronet owned them, although their back catalogue of films made earlier were reissued under the Coronet banner.

One example is a popular series, "World Cultures & Youth", which was actually produced in Canada, but with some backing by Coronet. The company started offering VHS videocassette versions in 1979 in addition to films, before making the transition to strictly videos around 1986.įor space reasons, only a very select number of independently produced films that Coronet merely distributed, including many TV and British productions acquired for 16mm release within the United States, are included here. The majority of these films were initially available in the 16mm film format. This is an alphabetical list of major titles produced by Coronet Films, a leading educational film company from the 1940s through 1990s (when it merged with Phoenix Learning Group, Inc.).
