With that
I believe reputation has never been a good metric to measure a user's
ability to approve edits, which is why I'm suggesting that we should
use the user's editing + flagging history to better determine if the
user is suitable or not.
I do completely agree.
When you join Stack Overflow, you are not very familiar with how this site works. It's different from many other programming-related sites. Some of us jump right in into the FAQs and MSO/MSE and figure out on their own what this community is like, what is considered a good/bad edit, when and how to properly flag. Others learn by method of trial and errors.
From own experience, I assure anyone who ever suggested an edit, flagged something for attention etc. that they will get educated by the response to their actions (suggestions/flags) if they keep monitoring it. This is a great way to learn about the site.
I can't even remember the amount of times I used to get frustrated by having a flag rejected or suggested edit rejected while I thought - I was right!. There have been multiple times I have researched meta (the old SE before the split) and found out I actually wasn't right!... I also have asked questions to clear my doubts as well as suggested my own ideas to the community what could potentially be improved.
See.. I still haven't mentioned reputation...
This, may have taken a while ( over a year ) but now I am rather confident about reviewing, passing audits, even pointing others in the right directions when they are wrong. I am only human so I do make mistakes but in comparison to what I was "playing" a year ago I have progressed a lot! By participating, earning editors badge, suggesting edits etc you actually do learn a lot about how this site really works and how to help moderating it this is why I completely agree with you and support your idea that reputation shouldn't matter when it comes to "Should I be eligible to review?"
About your points
I like all three except the first one
W% of their suggested edits are rejected,
realistically, you're right. You should have some edits rejected because no-one is perfect but I have seen people with 100% approval rate who surprisingly are not banned and the reasoning even more surprising; where other people said it's possible because you can skip everything you're unsure about and only accept quality edits. I personally disagree with this argument but since someone else mentioned it here on meta while talking about robo-reviewers I am taking this option to consideration.
The other 3 points I do agree with
they have made >X suggested edits (or have an edit badge),
As explained above; everyone should have made at least >X
- say X = 50 to get at least a rough idea of what it is like to submit a suggested edit and to see how it has been interpreted by more experienced reviewers.
more than Y% of their raised flags are deemed "helpful".
they have raised >Z flags.
raised flags
> 100
? Would anyone agree? This could be backed up by a very similar reasoning from the above - you should have had a few flags submitted and monitored the outcome before you are allowed to judge other peoples' flags...
Overall great idea! I am supportive all the way :)
accepted:rejected
edit ratio, so robo-editors would also be stopped (or at least reduced).