Here is a conceptual view: a crucial ($\rm\color{#c00}{characteristic})$ property of integral ring extensions is that they don't alter unit properties in the base ring, i.e. a nonunit $\,r\in R\,$ remains a nonunit in any integral extension ring $S.\,$ [For example, this may allow us to deduce that Diophantine equations in $\Bbb Z$ are unsolvable by deducing a parity contradiction $\,2\,|\,1\,$ in any number ring with parity, or a proof that $(9+4\sqrt{5})^n + (9-4\sqrt{5})^n$ is even]. Thus the nonunit $X\in R[X]$ must remain a nonunit in any integral extension (so the OP extension is not integral since it inverts $X$)
A proof is easy: below specialize $\,u \in R\,$ to get $\,\bbox[3px,border:1px solid #c00]{u^{-1}\text{ is integral over }R\! \iff\! u^{-1}\in\ R\,}$
Lemma $ $ Suppose $\,R\subset S\,$ is an integral extensions of commutative rings and $\,u\,$ is a unit in $S$. Then $u^{-1}$ is integral over $R\iff u^{-1}\in R[u]$
$\begin{align}{\bf Proof}\ \ \ u^{-1}\ \text{is integral over } R&\iff u^{-n} = r_{1} u^{-(n-1)}+\cdots +\, r_n,\:\! \ \ \ \ {\rm for\ some}\ \ r_i\in R\\
&\!\!\overset{\times\ u^{\large n-1}\!\!}\iff u^{-1} =\, r_{1}\ +\ \cdots\,\ +\,\ r_n\, u^{n-1},\ \ {\rm for\ some}\ \ r_i\in R \end{align}$
Generalization $ $ More generally it is easy to prove that $R[u]\cap R[u^{-1}]\,$ is integral over $R$.
Viewed in terms of ideals the key property is: $ $ principal ideals $\:\!(r)\:\!$ survive in integral extensions, i.e. $\, rR\neq 1\,\Rightarrow\, rS\neq 1.\,$ Integral extensions can be nicely $\rm\color{#c00}{characterized}$ by various universal forms of such ideal survivability, e.g. see the paper of Coykendall and Dobbs cited here.