A short time ago, we introduced the new triage queue - a place where users can quickly sort questions into various categories, where one of those categories is 'needs improvement'. Until now, we've been alluding to a special place where questions that weren't quite ready for prime exposure could benefit from some of our more experienced users working closely with their authors. Today, we're happy to announce that this queue is now accessible, in a much earlier state than planned.
If you've got at least 2000 rep, please go say hello to The Help & Improvement Queue!
The new Help & Improvement Queue is a place for anyone that has the desire to help new users learn the ropes in the best way possible - by jumping in and taking some ownership in their experience as you teach them what makes questions great through your edits and helpful comments. Remember, questions in this queue have been selected because enough people thought they showed strong potential, but needed some work before they were ready for full visibility.
If you don't yet have enough rep, worry not - there's plenty of details and pictures to come.
Here's what we've done
We're targeting this queue for users that have the patience to gently help new users with great potential, while improving the overall quality of the site. You'll need to have a tad more than a bit of time to spend, since the work asked for in this queue is more than is asked for in the rest.
Upon entering, the queue presents you with a question identified as needing improvement, and any comments it might have. You have three possible paths to take:
Edit the question through a guided interface that helps to ensure strong substantive edits that really improve the question, along with putting an emphasis on the why behind the edits you made in order to help the author learn to write stronger questions.
Comment helpfully, and encouragingly if the question seems to be missing something that only the author could know which prevents any responsible attempt at editing.
Skip to the next question to work on if this one simply isn't the best question for you.
Let's have a look at it, starting with the first thing that you see when you enter the queue and are given a post to work on:
We surface comments here because they quite often contain bits of information that are valuable to editors. New users all too often receive a comment asking for clarification, and reply with a comment instead of editing - you'll have the full context.
Comment moderation tools are also active, if you see noise that needs to be cleaned up it's easy to flag. Let's take a look at what you'll see when you click edit:
That's... not your average editor! We really need substantive edits on questions in this queue, and so we designed the interface to lend to that. Let's look at what's interesting:
'Just in time' help that changes as you move from field to field. This works like a checklist that even experienced editors can appreciate. It's all the guidance we've ever given on how to make great edits in an extremely condensed form, where you see just what's relevant to the part of the post you're currently editing.
You edit the body first, because that's generally what you need to do in order to come up with ideas for a better title and possibly more tags, which come next in order.
We ask you to explain why you edited the way that you did in a comment that will be left on the question and copied to the edit summary. This is your opportunity to teach someone the fine nuances of asking questions by mentioning how a clear and descriptive title will help them get better answers sooner. Don't worry, we provide some examples.
The summary is also a very useful way to ask folks for more information when needed, if you're able to make other improvements to the question. Let them know what you fixed, tell them what else is needed. Good things happen when others see us taking constructive ownership in their questions.
This queue is mutually exclusive, no two reviewers are going to be given the same post to work on. Additional features to address common frustrations when editing are planned soon.
Here's what we need from you
As I mentioned, we're making this available a bit sooner in its development cycle than we would normally make something of this significance available to test. We're extremely excited about what we have, but please expect it to be rough around the edges. We're looking for feedback on ways that the interface could be more optimized for the time you're willing to give, and any ideas to make it better.
While the focus of the interface is strongly on editing, the focus of the queue is to help a selection of mostly new users that will probably go on to ask great questions once they learn the ropes. Editing is of course the best way to do this, but we're putting equal emphasis on teaching.
Here's what we still have planned
There are other things that need to go into this. Here's a short but not necessarily exhaustive list that touches on most of them:
It should be easier to up-vote something after you save an edit. That was in the first design, and will be going back in, similar to how it works in other queues.
We should have an additional progress indicator that lets you know when questions you've previously edited managed to do well, because feeling good about helping new users while helping the overall quality of the site is what this is about.
There will be special badges awarded when questions you've edited have gone on to do well - based on votes, answers, and votes on answers that they subsequently received. We need to collect some data before defining the actual mechanics, but we're currently taking suggestions for names - bronze silver and gold.
The side bar help will have an 'expert' mode of some kind once you've done a certain number of edits in the queue. This could be where we'll track questions that you helped do well by editing - still a bit up in the air.
Go give it a try and see what you think. Remember, these are users that came to us with relatively good questions on their first or second try. With a little help and encouragement, they're very likely to be the kinds of users that we really hope decide to stick around. It's easy to tell someone what they did wrong; it's harder to make them want to do it better. Teaching is very much what's needed and what we're working to encourage.
This queue is currently available only on Stack Overflow, however we do have plans to enable it everywhere once finished and thoroughly tested.