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Can we make this meta site work for mentoring?

No!

Because of the same reason why a kindergarten and a parliament cannot co-exist in the same building.

Can Meta Stack Overflow constructively answer the example questions about debugging and asking strategy?

Yes!

But the resulting fiasco would be equivalent to the one you would have if you put a kindergarten in the parliament.


Meta is the place where you shape the Stack Overflow. It is frequented mostly by avid users. There are few cases where newbies have asked a well-formed question about why their question was closed/downvoted, but these are edge cases.

If we try to use Meta for mentoring, their will be a truckload of rants with a very few well-formed questions of users who are trying actually to learn. And it will be annoying. And the real meta talks will slowly die.

There is a requirement for a place to mentor new users. Be it Stack Overflow Academy or some other thing we still haven't thought about.


I noticed that most of the time new users are slammed hard with comments for posting a bad question. Some are really sarcastic comments. While there are times where my emotions take over, I always try to comment something like this if I saw a bad question:

Welcome to StackOverflow. While SO is a community of individuals who are willing to help others like you, it may be that they will be unable to help you because [the reason why your question is bad: unclear, no code, wall of code, etc...]

I have got some positive results with this approach. Most of the time the post is improved to the point I can revert my downvote.

Can we make this meta site work for mentoring?

No!

Because of the same reason why a kindergarten and a parliament cannot co-exist in the same building.

Can Meta Stack Overflow constructively answer the example questions about debugging and asking strategy?

Yes!

But the resulting fiasco would be equivalent to the one you would have if you put a kindergarten in the parliament.


Meta is the place where you shape the Stack Overflow. It is frequented mostly by avid users. There are few cases where newbies have asked a well-formed question about why their question was closed/downvoted, but these are edge cases.

If we try to use Meta for mentoring, their will be a truckload of rants with a very few well-formed questions of users who are trying actually to learn. And it will be annoying. And the real meta talks will slowly die.

There is a requirement for a place to mentor new users. Be it Stack Overflow Academy or some other thing we still haven't thought about.


I noticed that most of the time new users are slammed hard with comments for posting a bad question. Some are really sarcastic comments. While there are times where my emotions take over, I always try to comment something like this if I saw a bad question:

Welcome to StackOverflow. While SO is a community of individuals who are willing to help others like you, it may be that they will be unable to help you because [the reason why your question is bad: unclear, no code, wall of code, etc...]

I have got some positive results with this approach. Most of the time the post is improved to the point I can revert my downvote.

Can we make this meta site work for mentoring?

No!

Because of the same reason why a kindergarten and a parliament cannot co-exist in the same building.

Can Meta Stack Overflow constructively answer the example questions about debugging and asking strategy?

Yes!

But the resulting fiasco would be equivalent to the one you would have if you put a kindergarten in the parliament.


Meta is the place where you shape Stack Overflow. It is frequented mostly by avid users. There are few cases where newbies have asked a well-formed question about why their question was closed/downvoted, but these are edge cases.

If we try to use Meta for mentoring, their will be a truckload of rants with a very few well-formed questions of users who are trying actually to learn. And it will be annoying. And the real meta talks will slowly die.

There is a requirement for a place to mentor new users. Be it Stack Overflow Academy or some other thing we still haven't thought about.


I noticed that most of the time new users are slammed hard with comments for posting a bad question. Some are really sarcastic comments. While there are times where my emotions take over, I always try to comment something like this if I saw a bad question:

Welcome to StackOverflow. While SO is a community of individuals who are willing to help others like you, it may be that they will be unable to help you because [the reason why your question is bad: unclear, no code, wall of code, etc...]

I have got some positive results with this approach. Most of the time the post is improved to the point I can revert my downvote.

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Can we make this meta site work for mentoring?

No!

Because of the same reason why a kindergarten and a parliament cannot co-exist in the same building.

Can Meta Stack Overflow constructively answer the example questions about debugging and asking strategy?

Yes!

But the resulting fiasco would be equivalent to the one you would have if you put a kindergarten in the parliament.


Meta is the place where you shape the Stack Overflow. It is frequented mostly by avid users. There are few cases where newbies have asked a well-formed question about why their question was closed/downvoted, but these are edge cases.

If we try to use Meta for mentoring, their will be a truckload of rants with a very few well-formed questions of users who are trying actually to learn. And it will be annoying. And the real meta talks will slowly die.

There is a requirement for a place to mentor new users. Be it Stack Overflow Academy or some other thing we still haven't thought about.


I noticed that most of the time new users are slammed hard with comments for posting a bad question. Some are really sarcastic comments. While there are times where my emotions take over, I always try to comment something like this if I saw a bad question:

Welcome to StackOverflow. While SO is a community of individuals who are willing to help others like you, it may be that they will be unable to help you because [the reason why your question is bad: unclear, no code, wall of code, etc...]

I have got some positive results with this approach. Most of the time the post is improved to the point I can revert my downvote.