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There are three categories.

Looks OK:

Looks OK for questions that can be found, understood and answered as-is

And that looks OK. One might want to consider adding in a bit about formatting, but its otherwise good. If one was to tweak it, the following wording might be in order:

Looks OK for questions that are formatted well, findable, understandable, and can be answered as-is


The problem arises with the distinction between should be improved and unsalvageable. There are other suggestions with breaking should be improved into 'should be improved by the community' and 'should be improved by the person asking the question' as there are things that the latter can do that the former cannot.

Setting that aside, lets look at a flow chart and try to put those paths into words:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/8rcat.png

Should be improved currently reads:

Should Be Improved for questions where edits by the author or others would result in a question that is clear and answerable

Let's assume for a this that the author doesn't know the proper way to ask a question. While this should be improved by the author, lets work form the position that the author can't (language barrier), won't (addicted to 'i' and 'thanks in advance'), or doesn't understand what should be improved (a new user who wants to ask a good question).

From this we should change it to:

Should be improved:

Should Be Improved for questions where the community can improve the quality resulting in a question that is clear and answerable

Note the emphasis on the community. With the Help and Improvement queue this isn't just pushed off into nowhere and left for the author to improve.

That brings us to Unsalvageable. This currently reads:

Unsalvageable for questions that cannot or should not be answered and must therefore be removed from the site

This reads a bit hard. Furthermore, lots of people reviewing in triage appear to have the perception that this is only for the worst of the worst. Things that moderators wouldn't argue with a VLQ flag on it.

The problem with this interpretation is that questions that should be closed where there is a path for the author to refine the post and have it be a possibly good question (unclear, needs a mcve, too broad) get put into "should be improved" and sent to the H&IQ which leads us to the dissatisfaction with that queue.

People aren't sending the 'on topic - no' to unsalvageable. They aren't sending the 'specific problem - no' to unsalvageable.

Lets look at focusing this review option on things that the author can do.

Unsalvageable:

Unsalvageable for questions where improvement must be done by the author before the community can answer it, or for questions that do not fit in the Stack Overflow Q&A topics.


As an aside, it would be interesting to see if there is a relationship between the quality of triage reviews compared to the reputation of the reviewer and their activity in the H&IQ.

The measure of quality would be "reviewed post is positively scored and open after a week". "Looks OK" and "Should be improved" would be 'hits' for this criteria. Questions that are either negatively scored, closed, or deleted after a week would be hits for "unsalvageable".

Why do I ask this? Because any change in the criteria needs to be communicated to those who are in good faith being too lenient on posts between the should be improved and unsalvageable review options.

Why? Just looking at others who have co-reviewed with me:

Communicating the close reasons and quality expectations to these users (you will note that most are sub 3k rep) is key to properly feeding the help and improvement queue. When questions that are all multi line inline code get "looks ok", we haven't done a good enough job at setting the expectations for what a question should look like to those users.

Until that is done, in conjunction with improving the wording on the triage review options, the help and improvement queue will continue to be fed with questions where it's mostly "close this" rather than "fix this" (and more than a few 'this should get its markdown fixed before it gets too many down votes' will go through as 'Looks OK').

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    Yes. I want this.
    – Sam Hanley
    Apr 9, 2015 at 2:51
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    Could we add that flowchart or a more detailed flowchart in the Triage section itself? I feel like that would drastically improve Triage reviews. We'd just have to add a small disclaimer like: "This is for guideline purposes only, make your own detailed judgement"
    – logic
    Apr 9, 2015 at 13:18
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  • I agree
    – Travis J
    Apr 9, 2015 at 17:08
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    I suggest that changing the triage review guidance in itself is not enough; the button captions must be updated as well. As Kevin suggests in his comments under this answer, reword "Should be Improved" to "The community can fix this" and "Unsalvageable" to "Only OP can fix this," or something along those lines.
    – Jan Doggen
    Apr 30, 2015 at 11:49
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    I suggest encouraging people to Skip more often; I suspect many misjudgements occur on questions on topics with which the reviewer is unfamiliar. In particular whether the question supplies sufficient context is then often unclear.
    – PJTraill
    Jun 17, 2015 at 22:47

1 Answer 1

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This isn't a bad idea, but... I'm skeptical that it'll accomplish much.

The guidance on the review page itself spends most of its time hidden. The goal is to give new reviewers a broad overview of what they're supposed to be doing there, but once that's done it gets out of the way.

Indeed, it might be worth putting some effort into displaying it more often - for instance, after you've failed an audit.

But for Triage specifically, there's an even bigger elephant in the room...

I'm flagging this question for... reasons...

the flagging dialog

Yeah. That mess.

Go through the examples you listed and, pretending you're not a long-term veteran with a deep understanding of All The Rules, try to figure out what option on that flag dialog corresponds to the problems present in those questions...

Spoiler: it's the one about "this site's standards". My hypothesis is that a lot of folks who would be choosing "Unsalvageable" see that dialog and... Just give up. Clearly, the posts need some improvement; whether or not they meet some unspecified "standards" and should be closed is less apparent.

So I looked back through the past couple of days worth of logs. Turns out, folks give up before clicking "it should be closed..." somewhere > 20% of the time when working through Triage. Another 20% give up after getting to the close dialog.

One of the humbling lessons I learned from Close Review was that a lot of reviewers don't have the close reasons memorized; they'd compulsively open the dialog just to refresh their memories before making a decision. So I'm less worried about the folks who decide to choose a different option after getting to the close dialog, but the folks whose first impulse is "unsalvageable" and then give up on the first page concern me: we're driving them to make bad decisions by not giving them the information they need.

What does this mean in practical terms? I took a look at 1712 or so recent reviews that were concluded as "Should Be Improved", where fewer than 2 reviewers chose "Unsalvageable". 107 of them had at least two requests for the flag dialog. I think that's a reasonably conservative estimate of how many incorrect decisions we could've potentially avoided by improving this dialog...

Of course, the actual damage could be much greater. Remember, close flags are intended as training wheels, positioned not just as an input mechanism but as a form of training for new user-moderators. This is the same dialog that everyone under 3K sees - if a sizable portion of flaggers aren't clicking through to the close options (and they aren't...) then that's a whole lot of people who aren't being educated on what options are available.

Being forthright: flagging options that say what they mean

So... We need a better flagging dialog for questions. Here are my goals:

  • clearly distinct options
  • descriptions that cover the breadth of each option in sufficient detail to allow new flaggers to make a sane decision before selecting it.
  • same number of options as today... or fewer.

Here's my first stab at reworking this:

I am flagging to report that this question is...

  • spam
    Exists only to promote a product or service, does not disclose the author's affiliation.

  • inappropriate
    A reasonable person would find this content inappropriate for respectful discourse.

  • should be closed...
    This question is completely unclear, incomplete, overly-broad, primarily opinion-based or is not about [programming] as described in the help center, and it is unlikely to be fixed via editing.

  • a duplicate...
    This question has been asked before and already has an answer.

  • in need of moderator intervention
    A problem not listed above that requires action by a moderator. Be specific and detailed!

Thoughts?

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    Perhaps reviewers should be able to vote 'Unsalvageable' without flagging. (But could we change the wording of the hints anyway? Is it not trivial to do?)
    – Radiodef
    Apr 20, 2015 at 23:09
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    That's substantially better, although the last one is still misleading: flagging ♦ is sometimes necessary for problems that are not so much "serious" as unusual, like making a question (un-)CW or deleting all the comments on a post because they're obsolete. Apr 20, 2015 at 23:27
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    New users frequently use the last option for things like "I need an answer urgently!", @Nathan. Appreciate any suggestions for clarifying the sorts of problems one might actually benefit from bugging moderators about.
    – Shog9
    Apr 20, 2015 at 23:32
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    Maybe something like "in need of moderator intervention -> A serious problem that requires an action only available to a moderator"?
    – Radiodef
    Apr 20, 2015 at 23:34
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    Agreed, Shog, and @Radiodef's suggestion seems to be getting a lot closer. Maybe swap out "serious" for "significant" and see if that does the trick? Apr 20, 2015 at 23:39
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    This should probably be its own meta question. I don't like the idea that from now on "needs closing" means "unlikely to be fixed via editing". While technically correct, I thought the idea of putting a question on-hold or closing it should be a temporary state, until it's edited and improved. Apr 20, 2015 at 23:56
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    "inappropriate" doesn't seem the right word for the third bullet; to me at least it brings to mind something more egregious than forgetting to post the code along with the error it throws. I suggest "cannot be properly answered" instead of "inappropriate".
    – user3717023
    Apr 21, 2015 at 0:01
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    Personally, the reason I always found this dialog intimidating was because it's actually 2-3 layers deep, and some of the most useful/common reasons are buried in those deeper layers. I'd rather have a "flat" dialog showing me all of the options (with no space wasted on descriptions for the "top 5") so I actually knew what I was choosing from. Then show the full description on click/hover but before confirmation. Probably won't happen, but that's my $0.02.
    – Ixrec
    Apr 21, 2015 at 0:05
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    @SecondRikudo - I think we want to differentiate between things that can be improved by the community and things that only the poster can edit to clarify. Closing applies to the latter and "Should Be Improved" to the former.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    Apr 21, 2015 at 0:06
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    Well, I'd say it "needs improvement from the author" rather than it being "unlikely to be fixed via editing", or perhaps emphasize that YOU, the reviewer, can't fix by editing. We generally want people to edit and reopen their closed questions. Apr 21, 2015 at 5:48
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    My only suggestion is to add "This has no serious issues that I can articulate, but it annoys the living &#@*&# out of me and I want to tell someone"
    – user50049
    Apr 21, 2015 at 16:27
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    Keeping bold labels short is one thing, but "inappropriate" is so generic and vague that you might as well get rid of all the other options and just have that one. Sure, the description says "inappropriate for respectful discourse", but how many people even know what that means? Case in point: we're now getting more incorrect red flags than "please help me" flags per day - that's got to be a record.
    – BoltClock
    Apr 22, 2015 at 13:45
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    We are getting a lot of bad flags due to the "inappropriate wording", I think we need to move that back to offensive or something in line with the Be Nice policy. Can we also move the "offensive" flag down the list? Being at the top people are applying it when it is flat out wrong. Examples 1, 2, 3 bad but not offensive.
    – Taryn
    Apr 22, 2015 at 14:06
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    "inappropriate wording" is but one of the reasons people are seeing fit to use the "inappropriate" flag today @bluefeet.
    – BoltClock
    Apr 22, 2015 at 14:13
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    The rewording and reorganisation is good and welcome, but the duplicate option is now accessible in both the new and existing path - duplicated, you could say :)
    – Luke
    Apr 22, 2015 at 20:33

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