There has been a lot of talk lately about how to improve question quality.
Motivation
- People receive a benefit (reputation) for doing something we don't want them to do: Asking and answering questions that should be closed.
- People don't receive a benefit for doing the correct action, e.g. downvoting and flagging for closure.
Solution: Allow and reward "suggested close votes"
We already give a small amount of rep to encourage new users to edit/improve posts. I think we should do something very similar for close votes. Imagine the following:
- Low rep users can vote to close a post... that DOESN'T COUNT, or counts far less, e.g. 20 low rep users needed to close.
- These posts will go into the close vote queue, however.
- If it turns out that they're correct, and the post does get closed, they get 2 rep.
- One possibility is give each low rep user 1/4 of a vote, and cap low rep votes at 12 * 1/4 = 3 close votes, and two high rep votes are still needed to close. Only those first 12 would get the 2 rep.
- We also get low rep users used to the concept of "cleaning up noise" from day one, which I think is the biggest benefit.
- Higher rep users would still not get two rep for closing a question, just like now when they don't get any for edits.
- Inspired by @PeterMortensen: We should also cap the total amount of rep that can be gotten this way, just like with suggested edits.
- Inspired by @Amicable: Only award the rep if the close reason matches the reason it's ultimately closed.
- The exact details can be worked out, that's why I marked this as discussion
But durron597, they can already flag posts for moderator attention!
- They're not rewarded for doing that now
- However, they're much more massively rewarded answering "noise" questions
- One upvote is a lot more useful to a low rep user than a "helpful flag".
- It can even be a lot more than that if they're fast at answering an easy wide audience duplicate.
- They may click the wrong one, because they don't understand the difference between a question that's say, too broad, and "very low quality", or they click "other" when they really meant to click "off topic"
Update: @Servy points out that there's never a reason not to mark every post for closure. This can be combatted in the same way it's combatted for suggested edits:
Additionally, any user who submits many rejected edits will be banned from suggesting further edits for 7 days.*
We could do the same thing... close vote too many questions that don't ultimately get closed and you lose your ability to do it.