Elena Georgievna Glagoleva (Russian: Елена Георгиевна Глаголева, 8 April 1926 – 20 July 2015)[1][2] was a Soviet and Russian mathematician and mathematics educator who organized a correspondence school for the mathematics in the Soviet Union based at Moscow State University,[1][3] and as part of the project coauthored two mathematics textbooks with Israel Gelfand.[1]
She is the author of:
Метод координат (with I. M. Gelfand and A. A. Kirillov, 1964); translated into English by Richard A. Silverman as The Coordinate Method (Pocket Mathematical Library, Gordon & Breach, 1969),[4] and by Leslie Cohn and David Sookne as The Method of Coordinates (Library of School Mathematics, MIT Press, 1967; Dover, 2002)[5]
Функции и графики (with I. M. Gelfand and E. E. Schnol, 1965); translated into English as Functions and Graphs by Richard A. Silverman (Pocket Mathematical Library, Gordon & Breach, 1969)[4] and by Thomas Walsh and Randell Magee (MIT Press, 1969; Birkhäuser, 1990; Dover, 2002);[6] translated into German by Reinhard Hoffmann as Funktionen und ihre graphische Darstellung (Teubner, 1971)[7]
Электричество в живых организмах (Electricity in Living Organisms, with M. B. Berkinblit, 1988)
^Vasil'ev, N. B.; Glagoleva, E. G.; Gutenmakher, V. L. (June 1971), "Five years of operation of the Correspondence Mathematics School", Soviet Education, 13 (8–10): 236–243, doi:10.2753/res1060-939313080910236
^ abJoint reviews of the Silverman translations of both Functions and Graphs and The Method of Coordinates: