I recently gained access to the Low Quality Posts (LQP) queue. Now that I've reviewed nearly 100 answers, I decided to go back and audit my reviews to make sure I am maintaining a good track record.
While the bulk of my reviews agreed with the consensus opinion, I am concerned to find a handful of my Looks OK votes don't (see Audit for details). I am raising these with the community to determine if I should be applying stricter criteria.
Note: I am not contesting these reviews. My goal here is to determine if I need to update my rubric, or if these are simply judgment calls that reasonable people will weigh differently.
Contents
- Rubric
- Recommend Deletion
- Looks OK
- Skip
- Potential Issues
- Answers that fail to address the question
- Duplicate answers
- Audit
- Deleted by moderator
- Deleted by review
- Flagged for deletion by (nearly) every other reviewer
- Sources
Rubric
To start off, I'm following a fairly deterministic rubric, so I'm assuming any flaws in my process can be identified by articulating that.
Recommend Deletion
I immediately click Recommend Deletion if the answer is:
- Spam
- Plagiarized content
- Illegible (e.g., not posted in English)
- Asking a new, related, or follow-up question
- Bumping the question ("I have the same problem")
- Not offering instruction beyond a link
I also click Recommend Deletion if an answer is exclusively one or more of the following:
- Clarifying the OP's requirements
- Responding to other answers or comments
- Thanking another contributor
Note: If the contributor thanked someone, but then posted code from either the comments or an updated version of another answer, I click Looks OK.
Looks OK
Generally, I'm considering everything else as acceptable. Notably, this includes answers that:
- Are code only
- Are technically incorrect
- Repeat other answers (without overtly plagiarizing them)
- Misunderstand the question, or don't seem entirely relevant
- Are cumbersome to read, but still legible
Note: Obviously, these may not be good answers. But it is my understanding that a down vote is more appropriate here. In many of these cases, I'll leave a comment providing further guidance.
Skip
Generally, I'm less likely to skip in Low Quality Posts than I am in other queues. Some exceptions:
- The answer falls into a gray area above, and I could make an argument either way
- I don't have the technical knowledge to differentiate between a rhetorical question and a question meant to clarify requirements
Note: I've included a list of sources I used to develop this rubric at the bottom of this post.
Potential Issues
I suspect that my disagreement with other reviewers comes from my failure to address one of the following two pieces of guidance, so it'd be useful to discuss these, and whether I'm doing it wrong:
Answers that fail to address the question
From Guidelines for reviewing low-quality posts:
[A] Answers that fail to address the question: If you evaluate the answer such, first check carefully whether there is a lack of clarity in the question that you and the answer’s author may have interpreted differently. Otherwise recommend deletion. Leave an explanatory comment in both cases.
Something I've been told elsewhere (e.g., in SOCVR, on comments on Meta) is that if an answer could be a valid answer to another question, it's not NAA. I've been maintaining that here, instead of making judgment calls on how relevant the answer is to the current question.
Duplicate answers
From Low quality, but looks salvageable - trying to pick between 'Looks Good' and 'Recommend Deletion':
[Delete] If the answer duplicates another, better answer to the same question (e.g. a link-only answer where another answer provides the same link with an explanation).
Unless it's obviously plagiarized, I've been marking these as Looks OK. Instead, I'll tend to leave a note like:
Please be sure to review other answers before contributing your own. This guidance has already been provided by the accepted answer. If your answer remains relevant, be sure to provide an explanation of why it's different from existing answers—and especially highly-voted or accepted answers.
Should I be applying a stricter criteria for these two cases?
Audit
Deleted by Moderator
The following are posts that I marked as Looks OK, but were subsequently deleted by a moderator. I acknowledge that moderators may be evaluating additional criteria, but it’s still an indication that I might be missing something:
- Android Studio Emulator Hanging Thread (Windows)
- “[Error] invalid branch to/from an OpenMP structured block” I have this error (This is my mistake)
- Formgroup for N same element
- Angular 8 Post Request issue
Deleted by review
- isin not working on ndarray of datetimes except with deprecation warning
- Tensorboard Unble to get first event timestamp for run
Flagged for deletion by (nearly) every other reviewer
- Jenkins pipeline - How to give choice parameters dynamically
- Access the value from resource file programmatically
Sources
I am basing my rubric on the following sources:
- Guidelines for reviewing low-quality posts
- Low quality, but looks salvageable - trying to pick between 'Looks Good' and 'Recommend Deletion'
- You're doing it wrong: A plea for sanity in the Low Quality Posts queue
- How do I properly use the “Not an Answer” flag?
- Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?
- Reviewing low quality posts: when to delete
Recommend Deletion
if the answer is outright wrong. The only exception is if the answer is very recent and the author might be working on fixing/improving it. That's just my personal opinion though.FAQ
s—wrong answers should not be flagged as Not An Answer or deleted as part of the Low Quality Posts queue. That guidance is both concrete and consistent, so isn’t an area I’m particularly concerned about.