Timeline for Can we make this meta site work for mentoring?
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
15 events
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Aug 24, 2014 at 13:51 | comment | added | Elin | In my little corners of SO I see lots of posts with close votes that are fixable. Sometimes it's that there are multiple tags and voters don't realize that it's an ok, even good, question in one of the tags. Other times I'll recognize the question as something I've seen and know the answer to but the question really isn't good enough for the answer, so I'll ask the OP a set of questions that they need to answer to make it into a good question. | |
Aug 17, 2014 at 19:14 | comment | added | tmyklebu | @halfer: I'm on the "be rude" side of the civility debate. I also frequently VTC. But people aren't thinking, they're VTCing questions because they step on our stupid wording landmines by accident. Every time we close an interesting question, that means we have to close 100 or so crap questions just to get the concentration of interesting questions back to where it was, and I don't think we should be digging a bigger hole. (But I think I've made my point here.) | |
Aug 17, 2014 at 18:55 | comment | added | halfer | OP, your overall point might be worth raising as a new MSO question - "Can we fix up posts rather than closing them?". In most cases I don't think we can - for example, posts that are too broad generally are missing code, and of course we can't supply code on behalf of the asker. FWIW I am very much on the "be nice" side of the civility debate, but nevertheless some questions just aren't useful, and cannot be rescued. | |
Aug 17, 2014 at 18:52 | comment | added | halfer | I'm a frequent close voter. I think the process of VTC does more good than harm, since we have a lot of people who have gotten so used to "the culture of free" on the web that they seem to want work done for nothing. Some new users are actually quite explicit about this, without fully understanding that we're a community of volunteers. The minimum question quality is thus a good defence against help vampirism, and the Stack Exchange sites are one of the most active forces on the web to combat it. | |
Aug 17, 2014 at 9:42 | comment | added | tmyklebu | @CodyGray: I guess that's a big part of it. Reason I bring it up here is that I think it's a failure of meta's mentoring process---people are closing questions because they can, not because the questions they're closing need closing. Lost in "stem the tide of crap questions" was "but try not to stem the tide of interesting questions." | |
Aug 16, 2014 at 11:16 | comment | added | Cody Gray Mod | Well, there's been a lot of discussion by some of the veterans about the particular canned close vote reasons that exist now. A lot of us don't like them, for many reasons. They are rarely an accurate reflection of the true problems with the post, they use a lot of weasel words (like "unclear what you're asking") that make us close voters sound stupid, and they do define narrow buckets of acceptability that should not be so narrowly defined. I agree with you there. But I think that's a flaw with the close reasons, not with the system of closing and reopening problematic questions. | |
Aug 16, 2014 at 0:08 | comment | added | tmyklebu | @CodyGray: That doesn't seem to be why people VTC, though; questions attract close votes when they fit into one of the several narrow buckets of "closeable questions" either because they're garbage or because of an entirely fixable accident of wording. Maybe this is productive 95% of the time, but that's not quite what "more good than harm" means. | |
Aug 15, 2014 at 9:54 | comment | added | Cody Gray Mod | This does happen a lot. But it is not a panacea. As others have pointed out, lots of these questions are unfixable. Or at least, the people who voted to close them thought that they were unfixable. If you have a different opinion, well, that's why the edit link is there on your screen, too. It is also important to consider that closure is a temporary state. We want to get potentially problematic questions closed as quickly as possible to prevent a flood of answers that will be obsoleted by edits to improve the question. Once the question gets closed, it can be edited, and then reopened. | |
Aug 15, 2014 at 3:59 | comment | added | tmyklebu | @Cupcake: Point being? What I draw from that is that we need to lower the false positive rate of our crap-filtering. And, to me, that means actually reading the questions to see whether they're crap. | |
Aug 15, 2014 at 3:50 | comment | added | user456814 | 7200 new questions per day. | |
Aug 15, 2014 at 3:44 | comment | added | tmyklebu | @AdamRackis: Most of what's in the tub is bathwater. Throw out the bathwater. Don't throw out the baby. And most questions, recommendation or not, are unfixable crap. | |
Aug 15, 2014 at 3:42 | comment | added | Adam Rackis |
Right but most recommendation questions lack the clear and relevant question part. They're usually just what JavaScript libraries can I use to do ____ There's no saving a question like that.
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Aug 15, 2014 at 3:39 | comment | added | tmyklebu | @AdamRackis: A recommendation question, or something phrased as a recommendation question? You can state a clear and relevant question then follow it up with "what libraries or techniques can I use?" and that makes it a recommendation question for people who like VTCing because it uses recommendation-question phrasing. We don't need these sorts of stupid gotchas. | |
Aug 15, 2014 at 3:37 | comment | added | Adam Rackis | How would a recommendation question be fixable, trivially or otherwise? | |
Aug 15, 2014 at 3:36 | history | answered | tmyklebu | CC BY-SA 3.0 |