there are only two methods of integration, substitution, and "parts".
all other tricks concern particular types of functions, like trig funcs, and rational functions (partial fractions).
my school courses skipped these things, or i skipped those classes. the resulting gap in knowledge was never relevant to my research career, but only to my teaching career.
i.e. these things are taught but almost never used. hence after many years teaching them, i at last became familiar with them, but still never used them, except in teaching other courses like diff eq and several variables calc.
the integrals most interesting in research, are those which CANNOT be anti - differentiated by elementary functions,
which lead to elliptic functions and other esoteric concepts like the jacobian of an algebraic curve.
the theory of classifying exactly which functions can be anti differentiated by elementary terms, is however quite interesting, and has been essentially perfected, so that the process is no longer truly considered an art. i.e. there are actually algorithms which work when possible, and tell when the job is hopeless.
names like rosenlicht, ritt, and more recent ones occur here. you may search for articles on "integration in elementary terms".
here is a nice survey:
http://www.claymath.org/programs/outreach/academy/LectureNotes05/Conrad.pdf