We've changed the name to Requires Editing, with the following tooltip:
This question could be good, but requires some time and attention of editors
"Should be improved" was far too ambiguous, almost anything on the site could use some improvement if you think about it long enough. This also more strongly emphasizes that you're giving other people work to do by pushing the button.
This isn't, by any means, carved in stone. However, testing changes like this takes quite a bit of time per iteration, because questions that went into the queue yesterday aren't going to settle into their ultimate 'fate' for at least another few days.
I'm not, at this point, inclined to discourage sending things to the queue where it's pretty clear that only the author could provide the additional information. Data from this is still extremely noisy, but posts that went to the helper queue and only received a comment tended to do as well or better than posts that got edited in some samples, provided that they actually belonged there and weren't incomprehensible in addition to needing an edit only the author could provide.
This is for two reasons:
- Editing crap that didn't belong in the queue in the first place isn't going to help in many cases. The input is broken, and we're fixing that.
- While some askers find a link to the answer they need in the related column after posting and vanish, quite a few do stick around and remain responsive to comments.
Shog, Bluefeet and I will do another audit of 200 questions that went to the helper queue on Wednesday of next week (from the time the change was made). We'll determine if the questions belonged there, or if it should not have been sent there due to (a) being unsalvageable or (b) nothing being wrong with it to begin with.
We'll then see how much of a difference this made. I suspect that it's going to be substantially better. We'll then run the outcomes of the posts that went through the queue, and have much cleaner data, since we'll hopefully be much closer to being able to trust the input.
From there, we'll look at what's next, and that could be tweaking (or stopping) the recirculation of posts that went through the helper queue but didn't subsequently go anywhere back through the queue. We'll be able to see how many of these were just abandoned with much greater clarity.
With so many moving pieces, we have to test diligently, or we end up fixing it and not knowing how, or (worse) breaking it more and not knowing when. This will remain status-review until we've got more to report.
more
information isn't even that helpful.