On Programmers (and other sites, too!), we get a lot of honeypot questions that attract low-quality answers and are eventually closed. These answers then show up under the review tools.
While the review page is right to show these answers because they are indeed low quality, they aren't very actionable in their own right:
- Many (most?) of the questions have little chance to be reopened, so a reviewer editing, flagging, prompting a user to revise their answer is pointless at best and borderline sadistic at worst.
- In the cases where the closed question is savable, the community would want to revise the question before any of the answers anyway.
There was a previous suggestion to just avoid showing posts attached to closures or migrations, but I don't think it needs to be that drastic: a simple [closed] attached to the end of the question title would suffice. random's suggestion in the comments to provide a closed question filter would be also welcome.
This way, reviewers can look to deal with the questions to which these low quality answers are attached without having to waste a lot of time improving answers when the core problem hasn't been fixed yet.
How about it?
[closed]designation in question titles: we want to revise the question that the low quality answer was posted to moreso than just revise the answer. – user149432 Nov 18 '11 at 20:49