TLDR
Give new users and persistent offenders (who write poorly received posts) a tutorial they must complete before they can post, which highlights good and bad posts, along with reasoning as to why they are judged as they are.
The idea behind it is to educate these users about what the community expects to a degree when it comes to posting. The knock on effect is to hopefully reduce the number of bad posts as well as reduce the amount of time experienced user spend explaining the same things over and over again in comments and via voting.
There are plenty of suggestions about how to educate new users to help improve the quality of posts.
Some of the latest examples:
- Stack Overflow Mentorship Research Project
- Specific warnings to newbies about homework/code-writing, please debug and SSCCE
- Pre-flight screening checklist for first/early posts--adaptively pick three items, tune with metrics
- New user signup redirect to tour and most-voted questions
- Could some bad questions be avoided with additional prompting?
- Display a message to a user the first time they receive a downvote
- Why new users don't read the Help Center and what we can do about it
We already have a tour, MCVE and the help centre in general. All of which contain pages of information that would require a fair amount of time to digest and understand. I for one, found me feet by asking, paying attention to comments and learning from my mistakes and can honestly say that I've rarely read any of those pages in detail.
I'm not sure asking new users to read something in addition to what is already there is going to prevent the type of questions that they will ask. There is the click through mentality where they will see a next/continue button and carry on.
Why not have something interactive, similar to how we have review audits for reviewers, where we are tested and have to make a conscious decision in order to pass the review, at which point we are presented with a "Congratulations" or "Stop... Pay attention".
The Good, The Bad & The Ugly Tutorial
The purpose of the tutorial would be to highlight what the community deems to be good and bad when it comes to posting.
This tutorial would make all new users (and possibly persistent offenders) review and judge the quality of some sample posts. They would have achieve a pass threshold (which is open to suggestions) in order to be able to continue. Users could be presented with posts that are good, bad and down right ugly alongside advice that highlights what is expected of questions / answers.
They will be asked to choose:
- Good: Nothing wrong, question that follows community guidelines
- Bad: Question doesn't meet the requirements for posting for one or many reasons
- Ugly: The question has clear fo
rmattin
g issues with code, GRAMMAR & sppleing
Sample question review:
On the right hand side would be links similar to the Asking help content, that could popup a dialog with a few short lines / bullet points that provide information. Or instead of the full list, perhaps just some specific points about the current item that is being reviewed, so if they are unsure of how to vote, there will be relevant options there to highlight what the potential issues with the post are.
Reviews & Feedback
In the tutorial, after each review item has had a decision cast on it, a dialog should appear alongside the question to highlight exactly why it was good, bad or ugly, so the users can see what is expected and hopefully learn from it.
Reviews for questions and answers would test all of the standard items that appear in the review queue.
The voting choices are simple, but they would require some attention to the post that is being reviewed. If the user fails, we don't want to block them, so they should be able to retry immediately to hit the pass threshold. Hopefully they would pay more attention if they fail the first time.
While there could be a click through mentality with this, hopefully with a good choice of posts to review it could be made slightly challenging so that it wouldn't be a simple case of being able to guess at the correct answer by looking at the post.
This proposal is not intended to be complicated and take a long time to complete, it should be quick and simple to step through, as review audits are. A user that is paying attention should be able to go through a few reviews in a few minutes, which in the grand scheme of the amount of time they might spend on the site is a small fraction of time where they might learn something of value.
Compare these few minutes of practical against the amount of time it would take to go through the tour, understand what MCVE is and read the content of the help centre.
How to tailor the posts?
Sample posts should be as generic as possible and not require an in depth knowledge of a specific technology or tags. Most developers should be able to understand a post that has some simple question text with a little bit of code. We don't want the sample posts to prevent people from being able being able to get on with the tutorial.
A few favourite or specialist tags could be selected prior to the sample post selection so we could tailor it, although with the amount of tags in the system it may be hard to produce enough posts that are suitable for the review if more obscure tags are selected.
Users could also have a skip option if they are unsure about the correct choice on a specific post, which wouldn't count against them. In this scenario they would still see the feedback about what the correct choice should be and why.
Thanks for reading, feedback welcomed.
/tour
, where the "guide"/ "tutorial" guides you through a good post and highlights what makes it good. Posts can be "bad" or "ugly" for multiple reasons.