tl;dr: Let's allow new users to request a temporary "pit stop" for their questions before they enter the race track - a mode where the question is visible only to a group of designated "guide" users who can provide assistance - or moderation, including downvoting/closing (it's not a free for all; SO quality guidelines still apply, they're just inflicted with more generous explanation!) The difference to the mentoring experiment is that there is no one-on-one commitment here; only a group of people donating slices of their time and often continuing threads and discussions that others have started, which traditionally is the SO way.
Assumptions:
- A non-negligible number of new users tends to have an unpleasant first experience on SO. Part of this is because the tone can be very to the point and this is perceived as hostility by some (and not others; a question of personality type methinks, and communicating through boxes of text with no voice/body language to read.) A small number of users is truly abrasive.
- Even really lazy bozo users (as opposed to the honestly struggling that we want to help get on board) asking truly useless questions should be told off politely and professionally and never yelled at. Even if just because the yelling makes us look bad.
It is not reasonable to expect everyone on the site to become all kumbaya and extra nice and provide guidance to struggling askers of questions that aren't perfect. After all, the site is primarily about answering technical questions correctly.
However, there is a sizeable group of us willing to be extra friendly to users who ask for it (within reason.)
- Everyone would benefit if new users and their questions were exposed to those users first.
Suggestion:
Allow users with a certain minimum experience to sign up to a group of "onboarding guides".
Allow new users asking a question to request help from those users:
If they click this check box, their question will be displayed only to "guide" users for the first x number of views, or for a certain number of hours.
"Guides" will be browsing Stack Overflow as usual and see those questions in the list (although there could be a specialized review queue as well). The "guide" users will see a note on top of such questions (wording obviously subject to change):
After reaching the view count/time limit, the question will become an ordinary Stack Overflow question.
"Guide" users pledge to be extra welcoming and charitable with questions marked this way. This doesn't mean they'll accept any question no matter how bad, but they will
- Explain when downvoting (if applicable; complete garbage, spam, etc. excepted)
- Explain closevotes
- Be generous with guidance
- Leave a friendly comment before removing salutations and "thanks!" from questions
Questions in "pit stop" mode can't be answered until they leave the mode and become normal questions. I see no other way to avoid gross unfairness to the users who don't sign up to this scheme. (This has the inherent advantage of making the scheme unattractive to true bozos who WANT A SOLUTION NOW!!!!!!.)
New users could request this kind of protection for a number of questions, or until a certain reputation level - whatever works.
Possible advantages:
- Differently from the Stack Overflow mentoring experiment, there would be a lot less commitment required from "guide" users. One-on-one mentoring means showing up and being available until an individual's problems are solved. This is something many busy folks can't provide. The "guide" approach works much more like Stack Overflow always has - many different people donate slices of their time.
- New users are much more likely to have pleasant first interactions
- "Guide" users have a chance to explain how the place works directly to newbies without snarky users sniping in between
- Users who want to focus on questions rather than nurturing new users would be spared the sight of questions with problems
- The questions coming out of this "protected mode" are more likely to be well received
- Differently from the mentorship experiment, communication takes place in comments rather than chat, and there is no one-on-one relationship.
Potential problems:
- The one big potential problem that is obvious is numbers - few guides drowning in a sea of pit stop requests, many of which will just be like "plz send the code" (which would need to be shut down quickly.) Will there be enough "guide" users to respond to requests? There would have to be a lot of "guide" users and they would have to be encouraged to sign up in great numbers. (There shouldn't be any badges for activity around this though, to avoid making this a trophy that everyone feels they need to win.)
See also: A SWAT team of nice - first generation
Would this then be very similar to the first-post review queue
it would... the not showing the question to others, thus ensuring there's mostly nice interactions at first, is a big part of the equation, though. The worst that would happen is that your question has to wait longer until it's released into the wild (so there might have to be a feature allowing you to remove the protection if you get impatient)