While writing this answer (where I express my frustration that the "help and improvement" queue seems to almost only consist of low-quality questions that could, if at all, only be improved by the original questioner), I started wondering: are there statistics somewhere?
As in:
- How many questions go into that queue?
- How many entries in the queue get skipped, or classified as "low quality"?
- How many questions get edited?
- Most importantly: how many questions get edited and then, later on result in question upvotes, and helpful (upvoted) answers?
In other words: does "help and improvement" really, significantly help and improve the quality of the community? Or is more like a nice idea that fails in real world?
(I often think: the only action that would actually help the OP is a distinct comment explaining the deficiencies of his input. But well, that is not the purpose of that queue. It asks to EDIT or SKIP, or re-classify.)