Do you remember ever hearing of New Math? It was a change in the way we taught arithmetic for a brief time. It taught the algebraic basis for arithmetic, how arithmetic worked. It was really a good idea, but met with too much criticism and was dropped.
The traditional way of teaching to multiply 37 times 27 was to write one above the other, stick an X to the left of the lower one and a line under it, and then, starting with the numeral in the lower right, start multiplying integers, carrying as necessary, adding lines of products below in a specific fashion, then adding up the products to produce a result. That was an algorithm for multiplication. Like any algorithm, it worked every time, but it was cumbersome and prone to computational error.
New Math taught students to look at 37 times 27 as 40-3 times 30-3, written (40-3)(30-3). That was easy to do in one's head. That's 1200, minus 120, minus 90, plus 9. That's just 999. Easy. A lot easier than trying to do it the old way without pencil and paper.
One trick I learned to do, which is hard to explain by description, is to take pencil and paper and multiply a long number by another long number using the old notation, but producing a single line below it with the right answer (rather than a stack of lines to be added up). Example:
2468
1234
_____
3,045,112
I've raised a few eyebrows doing that in my day.

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