Quoted text is a copy-paste from https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/234172 by Gilles
The first posts queue is a very helpful tool to guide new users. It
should be expanded, not removed.
First posts (or early posts, not necessarily just the very first post)
warrant more attention for:
guidance in comments, regarding how to improve a question which isn't
suitable as posted, what extra information should be provided, what
could improve the quality of an answer, etc. spam triage edits, as the
user probably often hasn't mastered formatting — this is especially
important on sites with MathJax making extra sure that helpful first
posts are rewarded by an upvote (as rofl notes, it's especially
important to get new contributors to the stage where they can upvote)
The first posts queue is all about guiding new users. If it's misused
50% of the time, this means that 50% of users are getting this extra
chance of guidance. Removing the queue just because it isn't as
effective as it should be would be silly.
So yeah, this review queue is terrible and useless Wrong. Dead wrong.
I'm thinking we could probably make this work if we narrowed the focus
considerably; less "help new users in some mostly-unspecified way"
more "help filter the wheat from the chaff" This seems completely
backwards. Helping new users in some mostly-unspecified way is very
much what the first posts queue is about! Yes, triage is also involved
— there are users (especially spammers) that we don't want to help.
But primarily this is about guidance, about helping.
Before the first posts queue in its present form, I used to pay
special attention to posts on the front page marked “modified X time
ago username 1”. I deliberately went to these posts to provide triage
and guidance. This is obviously very approximate: it doesn't catch
cases when someone else modifed another post on that page afterwards,
sometimes brings me to already-deleted posts, etc. Essentially, what I
wanted a list of first (or early) posts requiring special attention,
preferably with some system so as to distribute said attention evenly.
Which is the exactly what the first posts queue does.
Ideally, a new user's posts should go into the first posts queue as
long as the user hasn't been determined to be good or bad. I'd like to
see something like this (I haven't thought about the numbers much):
A new account with 1 rep is considered new until further notice. All
posts by a new account go through the first posts queue. When a new
account reaches 2 posts with a positive score, it is presumed good;
posts no longer enter a queue based on the poster. When a new account
reaches 2 posts with a negative score, it is presumed bad; posts enter
the low quality queue instead of the first posts queue. Posts from new
users should enter the first posts queue as soon as technically
possible. We want to do triage and guidance as early as possible,
ideally while the user hasn't closed their browser yet.
Each post should be seen by multiple pairs of eyes. I agree with the
general idea that posts should exit the queue based on actions taken,
though it's not as simple as having had a vote up or down. Some posts
are just middling. I think the rules for number of reviews should be
relatively complex, perhaps a sort of point system (actions grant
points whether taken from the review queue or not):
the first upvote or downvote gives 3 points subsequent votes give 1
point, but the second vote gives 0 point if it contradicts the first
one a close vote or any flag gives 1 point an edit gives 2 points a
comment gives 2 points a “no action needed” review gives 1 point a
post stays in review until it's acquired at least 4 points, with
always 1 mandatory review I haven't thought much about all possible
combinations of actions, this is just an idea of what I think the
system should be. The idea is to ensure that feedback is provided to
the user.
Your post is too long and contains lots of irrelevant information. Nobody wants to read all of it to debug your code for you. You need to pare down the code to a minimal example that reproduces the problem.
I don't see the point in separating questions and answers. This queue
is about providing tailored guidance: you never know whether the next
post will be good or bad, so why would it matter whether it's a
question or an answer?
To combat the serial reviewer problem, we need to combat serial
reviewing in itself. This isn't a problem of the first posts queue
specifically. Making “no action needed” not count towards badges and
rankings might help, though I don't like it much — it penalizes
conscientious reviewers because of some bad apples. I had proposed
minimum quotas of each action to get badges. The objection was that
serial reviewers would turn to acting randomly and undoing their
damage would become harder — but I'm not convinced: are we really
undoing the damage of serial reviewers now? Alternatively, we can
punish serial reviewers: there are now tools to suspend users from
reviewing, and we should reset offenders' progress towards badges.
Audits aren't doing a good job of revealing serial reviewers because
too many of them are litigious and the ones that aren't are trivial to
avoid without really engaging one's brain. However, patterns of
behavior can be used to good effect — a user who spends 5s on average
and always selects the same action clearly isn't doing a good job. A
minimum time per review (with some averaging going on because there is
the occasional short review) could be enforced or verified (“you
cannot submit more than 10 reviews in 5 minutes, come back in 1
hour”); there are ways to make reviewing more annoying for serial
reviewers while not impacting conscientious reviewers, and we aren't
doing that at all at the moment.