After taking a look at the review in question, here's my take on things.
I spent a considerable amount of time updating an answer that was totally broken, out date, and useless.
That's usually a good thing. However, after a certain point, you aren't editing a person's answer, you're rewriting the answer. If your edit gets to the point where the stuff you added is longer than the original post (or even before you reach that point), you really should consider making your own answer.
This is because major edits that add or remove significant amounts of content or otherwise substantially change the content of an answer are not allowed, unless the post is community wiki. This has been covered elsewhere in MSO (here, for instance) and stated much more eloquently, but part of the argument is that you're effectively putting words into someone else's mouth, which really isn't too polite, and could be nonconstructive if you're incorrect.
Since the edit was rejected within 20 seconds, it would have been utterly impossible for anyone to have actually read or considered what I wrote, or what needed correcting.
To be honest, the reviewers really don't need to read what you did. If a reviewer is greeted with a massive wall of text as an edit to an answer, they're almost certainly going to reject it, simply because it's not a valid edit to make.
No only was this rejected, without any notice, message or other communication,
Yes, you don't get a notification; why, I'm not sure. I believe this is by design; why exactly, I don't know. I can speculate, but that's not the main concern here.
all my points were stripped.
Not really; you just never got the points you would have gotten for your edit had it been accepted. Not quite the same thing.
Seems not only a bit harsh, but unproductive. Is it not good to try to encourage users?
It's not harsh at all. You shouldn't get rewarded for an invalid edit. The reward is to encourage valid edits (which may or may not be working, depending on who you ask).
Teach them? Frankly, I can't learn if no one communicates, nor would I think anyone else learn using these methods.
Seems like what you would like here is a notification when an edit has been reviewed. I'm not aware of any feature requests for this, and I'm somewhat skeptical that this would be implemented. Unfortunately, you seem to be stuck with manually checking the results of your reviews.
Clearly communicating what happened to my edited post would be appreciated
You can go to your profile, click on the "activity" tab, click on the "suggestions" box, and look through your edits to see the results of reviews for your edits. There you can find (some) feedback for your edit.
well as why I got slapped with no notice or explanation.
Well, you have your explanation. As for the "No notice" part; unfortunately, I can't provide an authoritative answer about that. You can consider a feature request, but I'm not certain that that would be taken too well.
That being said, sorry to hear that you ended up wasting a lot of your time. As I said before, major "edits" like that would more properly go into their own answer. However, as you probably noticed the question is closed. Why?
To prevent things just like this from happening.
While your edit would have made the answer correct at the moment, eventually your answer would have met the exact same fate as the answer you tried to edit. Allowing this would result in some wild inconsistencies across the site ("Why is this question hideously outdated, while this question is always up-to-date?"), and in general isn't too productive without constant care, which isn't likely to happen outside of the most common questions, damaging the quality of the site.
As the question has now been deleted, it's a bit of a moot point. But please don't take this personally; take it as a learning experience. Just a few pieces of advice (with thanks to Ken White):
- Edits should not make substantial changes to content/message/etc.
- Think carefully if you want to edit an on-hold or closed question. If you can edit the question to the point that it is a good, clear, on-topic question for SO, by all means go ahead do that (with the caveat that you don't change the original intent/meaning of the question, of course). However, sometimes the question is on hold/closed for a good reason -- questions like homework dumps are hard to edit because you can't make the post substantially better without input/effort from the OP. Editing those is generally a pointless exercise.