HallsofIvy said:
Personally, I have never considered "mental arithmetic" to have anything to do with "mathematics". Probably just because I am so bad at it!
I keep wavering on this. There is the joke that there's an inverse relationship between the time spent studying higher mathematics and ones ability to do arithmetic. For awhile I bought into this and gave up trying to be better at arithmetic. However, I've gone back to working on mental math a bit during my breaks. However, I'm now doing it simultaneously with a study of number theory. Doing this, I'm able to tie together the supposedly "purely mathematical" world of number theory with something immensely practical.
Really, mental math is about two things:
Being clever about, and understanding numbers (the number theory and abstract element)
The mental workout involved in getting good at the tricks. This involves a development of working memory and purely computational skill.
I'm focusing more on the first part. What are the tricks and why do they work? By doing this, we can get better at arithmetic - but working "smarter not harder" (sorry for the cliche).
I also want to stretch the definition of mental math a bit. It can also be "written math, but with a lot less writing." If you can be clever about numbers, you can reduce the amount of tedious paper calculation - and if you do this long enough, you may develop more of your mental ability.
Sorry if this post is too "meta" for this thread. Though I'll contribute more later.
-Dave K