Would it be feasible and desirable to have practice queues for the various review queues? Such queues could help those who are new to the review process learn how to do reviews; they could also help established reviewers improve the quality of their reviews by showing them worked examples of best practice.
Such queues would consist of old or fake posts, similar to audit reviews, and upon completion of the review action on each post the user would be shown an action that's considered appropriate for that post, along with the rationale for that action. Eg, a practice suggested edit review task could mention getting rid of "fluff" like greetings and "thanks in advance"; fixing capitalization, spelling and grammar errors; putting code samples into code blocks and quotes into quote blocks; etc.
For some review tasks only one action is the most appropriate response, but in other cases there are multiple possible responses that would be considered acceptable. I guess that makes implementing such review queues a little more complicated, but hopefully the technical issues are not insurmountable.
When I first thought of this idea I envisaged it as a purely voluntary thing to help new reviewers (including myself) become both confident and competent at executing review tasks. So it would be somewhat like reading the Help pages, only more active. However, I now think it might be a good idea to make it mandatory: new reviewers would need to reach an adequate score on the practice tasks for a given queue before they get the badge that gives them access to the live posts. I guess to make the system fair current reviewers would also need to get such badges, but that should be a swift process, assuming they actually do have good review skills. :)
FWIW, I came up with the idea of practice queues when the Triage system was introduced. At first I was excited by the Triage process, but I quickly realized that most of the time I didn't really know what to do with most of the posts presented, and wished that there were worked examples that I could refer to so that I could learn how to do it properly, partly so that I could avoid failing review audits (not that I've ever actually failed an audit :) ), but mostly so that I could contribute to the best of my ability.
[product-discovery]
post, “Improving Review Queues - Design overview I: Onboarding and updating workflows over on Meta Stack Exchange.