I just read and thought about this question, about how to deal with suggested edits that may or may not be "too minor" and reviewers that blindly approve anything that doesn't effectively harm the posts expressiveness but can safely be considered pointless or redundant after all. I think "reject", or better "reject and edit" should be the course of action in such cases. And so I found this question:
In my question I'd like to pick up the idea given in this answer. To make approval of a suggested edit a little more complicated.
I'd like to suggest adding a set of check boxes to the approval UI, similar to the reject reason you have to pick when you reject an edit. I'd like to have reviewers to pick from a set of reasons why they approve an edit:
- The edit fixes grammatical or spelling mistakes.
- The edit clarifies the meaning of the post without changing it.
- The edit corrects minor mistakes or adds addendums / updates as the post ages.
- Other: ...
(I populated this list from the detail page on the edit privilege about when to edit posts. Feel free to think of more options.)
I feel this approach would incentivize reviewers to think more about their approval and thus lead to better justified actions. It would educate reviewers and thus strengthen the common understanding of the desired edit quality we, as a community, want to see on this site. Maybe this addition would allow for more differentiated auditability of approvals in the future.
The hard part in performing a review never was to make the required clicks but to make the review decision. And this suggestion does not alter this relation. The clicking will obviously be harder than it is now (around 2 more clicks). But the decision making could actually turn out to be easier when you can check against a list of criteria that can guide your decision.
I do not argue that an edit, however tiny, should be approved if it improves the post. I do not say that editors should not receive their reward, that contribute only a minor improvement. But an edit, that does not improve the post at all, should be rejected. Which is currently often not done.
I can't believe that placing around two more clicks makes the approval too complicated. Note that the edit summary that comes with each edit should already provide a hint what item(s) to check. I think that reviewers should be required to put as much effort into approving as into rejecting an edit. If this tiny additional step, that is to state the reason why one came to a decision just made, makes the process too complicated for a reviewer, he might just not be the right person to do the job.
After looking at the number of pending suggested edits in the SO review queue, I came to the conclusion that reviewer time is not an overly scarce resource. So maybe the additional burden of around 2 more clicks per review decision will not crash the system.
What is a peer review without meaningful feedback to the editor? As a follow-up these "qualified approvals" could be fed back to the editors (similar to the reject-notifications) to promote our sense of edit quality to these unexperienced editors (having less than 2k rep). How awesome would it feel to get feedback for your first edits ("Nice! You've fixed spelling or grammar mistakes!" or "Great! You've clarified the meaning of the post without changing it!").
After all, the absence of an approval reason for trivial edits in above list (e.g., "This edit does neither improve nor harm the expressiveness of the post.") might eventually lead to a decreasing number of these to bother us.
Try to make the post substantively better when you edit, not just change a single character. Tiny, trivial edits are discouraged.