I'm Yvette.
- Stack Overflow seems to be burning moderators; the moderator review queue is huge; you handle 100 flags, but when you are done there are already 200 new flags. Why do you think it will be fun to handle all these flags every day? What will make you survive more than a few months?
Currently I do enjoy handling flags on Pets.SE, but there's far fewer flags. There will be days when handling 100 flags feels like a chore and other days when it's more interesting. As I teach my children, when you make a commitment, you may not always enjoy it, the "fun" aspect of any activity waxes and wanes, the point of making a commitment is you do it whether you "feel" like it or not.
The key with any long term endeavour is to pace yourself. Flags are like housework, they'll wait for you, if feeling flagged (pun intended), it's a good idea to take a breather and then return to the keyboard. Personally my style is to pop in and out of the site many times a day.
There is also the facility to take a break and let other moderators know, so if going on vacation or personal workflow is temporarily too high to juggle, it's easy to manage.
- A question is asked and receives some very good answers. The asker then flags this question and asks for it to be deleted because having it up will cause them trouble at work or school. Do you delete the question?
Good content is not deleted, under the terms of service of the site, the content belongs to the network under the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike license. However, users can have post disassociated from their accounts.
I would provide a link to the contact page and instruct them to ask the Community Team to disassociate the question from their account. The network is working on the facility for users to "self-disassociate" posts from their accounts.
- A user has been criticizing your moderation decisions on Meta. This has been occurring frequently over the course of a couple weeks. Some of these posts are very constructively made, with examples and reasoning, while some are more rants. While any mistakes you've made that have come to light were corrected when brought up, it seems that almost every day the user is finding something you've done to draw attention to. The user is a high rep user and generally does not cause trouble, but does seem to have an issue with your moderation style. How do you handle this situation?
I'd reflect upon my moderation style and ask the other moderators, in a private chat, for feedback on where I might be going wrong and how to handle it. In Pets.SE, there's mod who has been moderating for several years and his experience as a mod is valuable and we, the other mods, sometimes ask for his advice. Learning from the more experienced mods is usually the best way to proceed.
As for interactions with the high rep user: I wouldn't reply to any rants, but allow, other moderators to handle anything that may transgress the Be Nice policy, beyond that, I'd ignore it. Constructive posts, I'd usually answer, with my reasoning and apologies for any mistakes I have made. Sometimes the cause of conflict can be miscommunication.
As it persisted, if the other mods were happy with my actions and attitude, I'd start ignoring the posts. There becomes a point, when trying to reach an agreement becomes too difficult, and it's better to walk away and focus on flags.
- Do you have any Meta posts that you're particularly proud of, or that you feel best demonstrate your moderation style?
This question and answer would be my favourite Meta posts How do I write a good tag wiki? Is it okay to use/copy content published elsewhere? and has become a part of the faq. There were a series of posts under the plagiarism, that I'd participated in and this post became the most constructive.
Nobody gets it right every time, we can only try and practice and learn from our experiences. This post is a good example of some trial and error and finding what was a good fit. My attitude is one of wanting to help and educate, and this post does both.
- As a moderator, you see something useful or interesting in a question by a low-reputation user, however there are a lot of downvotes and couple of flags on this question. Will you trust your gut and edit the question or otherwise override the community, or close it based on the opinion of these other reputable users?
I'd be reluctant to go against the community, there's so many varied topics on Stack Overflow and there's many experts in topics I know little about. If I understood the topic very well and could see that the user was trying and, perhaps, being misunderstood, I'd check with the OP that my understanding was correct and make a suitable edit. I have done this on occasion on Stack Overflow, but am always cautious, as there also comes a point where users need to learn how to use the site well and these types of helping hands can sometimes backfire.
- As we all know, Stack Overflow is near its completion (mature) (over its top if you like, or even has its way of doing things). The old-timers have their reputation, moderation tools and the occasional brawl on Meta. It is time for the next generation to take the wheel. How will you moderate the new flood of users and their content, given that most of them have different expectations from the current inhabitants? Are you going to defend what we currently have or are you going on a journey to shape the community to make them ready for the next 6 to 8 years? Please take a stand and elaborate.
At first I didn't like this question, as it makes the assumption that Stack Overflow is near it's completion, which could take a thesis to answer. Stack Overflow being mature, which is surely is, is an easier question to tackle. The struggle between the "old-timers" and the new user is eternal. So I'm not sure that the situation now is that dissimilar to the early days, in terms of the group dynamics.
The site will change over time, but it's also noteworthy that the site has processes that are observed and that change takes time and the community and the Community Team can prevent change that is not good for the site, and will review changes and reverse those that are not working. My point being, change is gradual, and I'm happy to abide by the community and site's wishes.
Generally, if users are following the Be-Nice-Policy, it's not my place to interfere in the process of change. I'm one voice of many in terms of how the community evolves. As a moderator it would be my job to help the community participate on the site, free of spam, abuses and other issues, rather than make the changes.
- A user who consistently asks poorly-researched questions gets flagged by another user (Example flag texts). What will you do?
I'd actually expect the user to end up with an automatic question ban. If the user was indeed asking a batch of poorly-researched questions, if they were close worthy, I'd close them and leave a comment under one of the user's posts. I'd likely mark the flag as helpful, as the user is not abusing the flag system and is genuinely frustrated. I'd check with the other moderators if an annotation should be made on the user's account in these types of instances.
- A lot has been said and asked about what a moderator is and what a moderator does. What do moderators not do? That is, other than "violate the rules" (which is already a given), what are the most important behaviors that a moderator should avoid engaging in or should make a valiant effort to minimize? Another way to phrase this is to ask: What are the most important unwritten behavior rules for mods that are not found in any SO/SE policy, AUP, code of ethics, or legal statute?
The most important things moderators can do is avoid controversy. Present as a stable person on the site. This can mean taking a back seat in debates if need be and it also means leaving behind social and political ideals or agendas, as we need to remain neutral. The focus is on behaviour and what type of behaviour is unacceptable and to moderate that. So it's important to be perceived as impartial or objective.
Another important asset would be to keep disagreements with other moderators in private chat. Not to have public debates that throw the community into chaos, but to present a calm and cohesive presence, working as a team of moderating the site. This doesn't mean we have to be clones, or have the same opinions, but to try to work out differences behind the scenes, so any disagreements are not blown up in the public eye, as the more people party to a conversation the more likely it will be blown up.
- Negative of number 4 - Are there any meta posts which you are not proud of? In other words, if you ever ask a meta post, and it receives a lot of negative feedback, what would you do? (Would you ask for it to be dissociated from your account?)
This post is one of my least favourite meta posts What can we do to resolve debates about gender?. I wouldn't ask for it to be disassociated from my account, as the attempt was valid, but it failed and it is from this I learned a valuable lesson. To keep my own private agendas, political or social ideals out of Stack Overflow. It's better to lead by example than try to convince people in a site where it's not really the place for the discussion. So the good thing about it is, I'm not going to discuss it again and my answer to that question is my last word on the subject. It's time to move forward.
- How would you deal with a user who produced a steady stream of valuable answers, but tends to generate a large number of arguments/flags from comments?
Delete any comments that are not constructive and leave the user a comment.
If it was to continue, discuss it with other moderators as to the preferred way to proceed, a moderator message at first, possibly leading to a suspension if the user was continually making abusive remarks.
These situations are always a bit tricky, because the moment you tell someone to calm down in a heated situation it usually inflames it. At the same time, we cannot change people, but only make the site a workable place for everyone.
- How would you handle a situation where another mod closed/deleted/etc a question that you feel shouldn't have been?
Usually not worry too much about these things. It would have to be a topic I was very confident in and really thought the question had value, in which case I'd bring it up in the moderator chat room and have a brief discussion over it. One thing I've learnt, is not to sweat the small stuff. We're all doing our best and there's many grey areas, it's not always clear cut.