tl;dr I'm interested in opinions on short division. Below I discuss my experience dealing with young children and long division versus short division. For those that don't know of it, wikiHow has a nice explanation on short division.
Recently I've been asked to help some children around the age of 10 with math, and almost immediately I find that they struggle with division. They take a long time to divide numbers and they always use long division, or some variant of it. I've even seen one person divide as follows:
\begin{array} {r|l} \require{enclose} 3 \enclose{longdiv}{1~8~6} \\ \underline{{}-~1~5~0} & 5~0 \\ 3~6 \\ \underline{{}-~3~0} & 1~0 \\ 6 \\ \underline{{}-~6} & \underline{\hphantom{5~}2} \\ 0 & 6~2 \end{array}
which just frustrates me. Excuse my rant. But I would expect people to know that one can directly see that the answer is $62$ by seeing that $18\div3=6$ and $6\div3=2$. Furthermore I ask them why they use $50$ on the first step instead of $60$, and why not just not have the zero and do it digit-by-digit and they say they noticed $50$ "worked" and that they've been taught this way at school.
Poor dividing aside, long division inherently takes a long time to do, as the name implies, and when given a limited amount of time to do an assignment or assessment in class, time consuming division can really hurt. Likewise, there is what is known as short division, which generally takes much less time but requires more mental calculations. But it would appear that no-one knows about short division explicitly, at least out of everyone I've talked to. I myself actually "figured out" short division at a young age from examples like $186\div3$ by simply skipping steps, but didn't even know it was called this before writing this question.
Out of all of the children I've helped with division, the only ones that struggle now are the ones that don't have their multiplication tables memorized. Dividing by multi-digit numbers is still a process, but it's not the kind of thing I would expect someone to be able to do easily. Dividing by single-digit numbers occurs often though, for example reducing fractions. Some of the kids with stronger mental arithmetic skills that I've shown this to can now do this process digit-by-digit mentally, so that they don't write anything out when doing $\frac{38}{56}=\frac{19}{28}$ for example.
Considering the usefulness of short division, it strikes me as surprising that this isn't well-known and taught more! Does anyone have any experience with teaching short division?
Edit:
I may've glossed over why, exactly, I find short division not only less space consuming, but also easier and faster. Firstly, this does not require a huge amount of mental arithmetic. In fact it only requires being able to compute very small divisions several times over.
The essence of short division is that we are just repeatedly finding what goes into something and what the remainder is, which most of the kids I've dealt with are capable of doing mentally, as far as what's required for short division. Note that I'm not talking about problems with divisors larger than say 11.
Take, for example, $847\div3$. Most kids I've worked with would know right off the bat that $8\div3=2\rm~R~2$. So they write a 2 on top and 2 by the 8. Then they know that $24\div3=8\rm~R~0$. So they write an 8 on top and 0 by the 4. Finally they know $7\div3=2\rm~R~1$. This gives the final answer: $847\div3=282\rm~R~1$.
These steps are not difficult at all as long as the divisor is at most 11 or 12. In fact most of the kids find this easy to do. For larger divisors I wouldn't expect someone to do this mentally with short division. I would expect them to use long division as usual for something such as $847\div13$.
It also helps with situations such as the aforementioned fraction reduction such as $\frac{38}{56}=\frac{19}{28}$. It's not too hard to see that 2 goes in, but with long division writing this out can take a while. Hence why this is also faster in such cases.