Why not spend a little time on improving the whole thing?
You're a developer / programmer too. We all know how hard it is to have the best system.
I would like to break down the main blockers for improving "the whole thing" (the review system) into... some smaller things:
Planning (Research and development)!
Every good system must be well-thought and carefully planned. This includes having a flow for the users (reviewers) to work with the system and be able to navigate it without problems. This includes:
- A viable design that allows users to surf with minimal documentation! A good service should be self-documenting and its instructions should be as critical as its interface.
- A design that is not problematic to implement. This includes technical limitations, such as server resources and the stress to limit for both server and client side...
- Whether it will be welcomed by the community,
- et cetera.
Note that the current system binds the "audit decision" to posts that are deemed "high quality" or "low quality" based on its algorithm. <assumption>
How it was received by the reviewers - a flat side response may indicate the correct feedback to take for this task, for example all reviewers in a LQP task decides to "Recommend close" , how it was received by the community - +8 upvotes with no downvotes on an answer may indicate it being high-quality? </assumption>
While there will be disputes on specific cases based on the specific scenarios with this system, such as link-only answers with little value without the link getting upvoted for its temporal usefulness just then, or answers that should be posted as a comment which were mercifully "Looks OK"-ed by the reviewers and caused the system to think it was not a problematic post... This does not deem the design terrible:
- Disputed audits were brought to community / moderator attention with the tag disputed-review-audits. They can get fixed, or the developers / moderators try to explain what was correct / not about the audits.
- While failing audits are punishing, it does make up for the incurred education within our reviewers. See Infinite Recursion's answer for a great, detailed example. Honestly, reviewing is hard and audits are there to stop (and correct) us before we make enough mistakes to disrupt the community participation. I sometimes come to a task and think "Oh boy, I'm not sure what to do." Were there without audits I would probably click a random button, since there would be no consequences for being in a "community-managed site". Thankfully there are audits so I would pay extra attention to the post if I bother (research about it, look at the main post and revision histories) or skip to let another reviewer
screw up do the work.
- Audits are effective. Currently we have "robo reviewers" over the place approving / rejecting / leave opening / (insert robo responses here) everything (and failing even the most obvious suggested edit audits which are simply automated vandalism). By having audits and rating a pass / fail for specific random tasks, reviewers who do not review carefully / review poorly will be punished accordingly. While bans may or may not be too harsh, that is another topic, and truly does stop reviewers, and even enlightens some to go through their review history to realize their mistakes and improve...
Implementation!
- I was wondering why we even have review audits, if they're implemented such that many of them are ambiguous?
Audits are tests for reviewers, and it would make sense only to blend into the regular reviewing process. Having a "You've done good job reviewing. Take a task with a 'This is a test to see if you're paying attention!' banner" procedure is not a constructive measure here.
- Why aren't they carefully chosen to be clear?
No system is perfect. There are disputed cases but that does not render the chosen audit tasks as uncarefully chosen, frankly mistakes, just like what we all make. :)
- Audits should be hand-picked, not random machine-picked?
It's not a very viable idea, considering hand-picked audits are not perfect either. While they might be slightly better, the additional effect will not make up for taking the person's time hand-picking the posts as audits.
(Plus, let's all just admit that good posts are hard to find around now.)
- The people who hand-pick them should also explain the exact reason why you failed. [...] Right now, the explanation is just as helpful as "You were wrong. Period."
A common way to learn from the mistakes would be to post the audit and your response in the audit in a chat room or post a meta thread, and be open to feedback as well. To have a detailed feedback queued in case a reviewer fails is to display, is not necessarily beneficial in terms of the implementation. Moreover, you cannot guarantee that the reviewers would read text after "You were wrong" if they do add it. It's better this way. YMMV.
Evaluation!
Users review. By taking audits, they learn they are doing the right thing or not. While some reviewers cheat by opening the parent post of the task in a new window to view its state and handle accordingly, most users are able to learn "I should upvote great content" and "I should deal with bad content, not 'no action needed' / 'looks ok'".
The audit feedback currently given as an automatic comment works fine. Actions such as deleting and closing are for posts with serious problems, and posts that has been handled with these measures are considered to have serious problems; Upvoting is to indicate questions showing research effort, is useful or is clear (seen in its tooltip), and posts which receives sufficient upvotes to be decided as a high quality post by the system will really be a high-quality post, and reviewers should upvote accordingly. These messages are clear and useful for reviewers. Some just don't pay attention and read them.
acronym: PIE. yes remember it, it is good. Trust me, I'm the Unihedron. :D
In conclusion, audits are not really as "not more clear and well-explained", but instead the opposite. They are essential to the current system and keeps reviewers doing the good. It's not as beneficial to "make them more well-explained" or "make them more clear", and these three points as I demonstrated above.
Postscript: Congratulations on your Reviewer badge for reviewing 250 Low Quality Posts :)
Postscript two: I'm not ready for reviewing either. I find myself more productive outside the queues than following through them during the ban, and recently started playing around with SEDE queries to catch up bad content instead. ;)