The goal for Should Be Improved: a third path for lackluster questions
This observation hits on the intention for Should Be Improved:
Without this information it is not impossible, but probably rather difficult for others to come up with a good answer.
There are a lot of questions that can be (and often are!) answered, but which make writing a good answer unnecessarily difficult, either because they make the answerer guess at part of the problem, or because they're just really hard to read (grammar, formatting, no summary, etc.)
Strictly-speaking, many of these can be closed: "unclear what you're asking" fits. But closing entails a hell of a lot of overhead... And reopening in those cases where the question is edited chews up even more resources from the good folks reviewing these. Worse, if someone does put the time and effort into deciphering the problem and writes up a decent answer before the question is closed... Well, now we've created a situation where we've guaranteed that time will be wasted: either those who reviewed and closed the question, or those who took the time to answer it. All for the want of an edit...
If we could just identify such questions sooner, it would become possible to do a few things to make this tragic situation less common:
And this is exactly what we're hoping to do with questions triaged as Needs Improvement... That is, if this test works and the bulk of the questions falling into that category can be easily salvaged.
That said... It's clear we should be doing a better job of drawing distinctions between these three categories in the review UI itself. Ain't nobody got time to read rambling meta posts like this.
New guidance for Should Be Improved and Unsalvageable
I suspect a big part of the problem here is that we were defining "Unsalvageable" via tautology:
Unsalvageable for questions that are unsalvageable and should be removed from the site
That's... less than helpful. Which naturally led folks to guessing at it based on what they see when you click the button: a really verbose flagging dialog. Which then brings you to the close dialog, and leads to confusion as to whether all questions that can be closed truly are unsalvageable. ...Which I already talked about, above.
Let's make this a bit more explicit, by contrasting it with your observation that I quoted above:
- Unsalvageable for questions that cannot or should not be answered and must therefore be removed from the site.
The other source of confusion seems to arise from the description for Should Be Improved, which reads:
Should Be Improved for questions that would benefit from further revision by the author or others
I see two problems there:
- Even good questions could generally use a bit of copy-editing.
- There's no criteria for what sorts of edits should be expected here. Typo fixes? Clarification? Complete re-write?
It's probably not a good idea to be too explicit here; after all, this is intended to be a grey area between excellent and awful. But we can still try to provide a little bit more contrast to the other options:
- Should Be Improved for questions where edits by the author or others would result in a question that is clear and answerable
These changes will be live after the next build:
should be improved
and 15% tounsalvageable