Summary:
The guidelines for what types of edits should be approved are unclear.
Details:
The help pages describe the reviewing suggested edits privilege as follows:
In addition, users with this privilege level can also begin reviewing suggested edits (which previously you would have had to suggest). These edits remain in a pending state until they get enough votes to either approve them and make the edits take effect or reject them and discard the edit. Two votes in either direction will finalize the action, except on Stack Overflow where three votes are required.
I think this does a good job of explaining the mechanism for how reviews work. But it doesn't provide any guidance as to what sort of edits should be accepted or rejected.
The reject button provides some feedback by requiring reviewers to pick a reason for rejecting an edit. And the review audits help by providing examples of edits that should definitely be rejected.
But my observation is that there is a wide range of minor/trivial edits where reviewers have conflicting opinions. For example here's an edit that 3 reviewers voted to accept and 2 voted to reject.
I have seen a lot of discussion on meta about reviewing edits and often there is a complaint that many reviewers are too quick to approve edits and simply approve everything. Today there was a question asking about trivial edits that don't fix all changes which led to a variety of opinions in the comments and answers in the responses.
The question specifically highlighted a question where an edit was proposed which would correct the spelling of a word in the title changing it from "Genrate" to "Generate". After being mentioned on meta the edit was rejected by a moderator for the reason:
This edit does not make the post even a little bit easier to read, easier to find, more accurate or more accessible. Changes are either completely superfluous or actively harm readability.
Obviously the edit does not "actively harm readability" so the decision must be that the change is "completely superfluous." However, I would not tend to categorize the change as "completely superfluous" nor would I say that it does not make the post "even a little bit easier to read." But I do agree that the edit is trivial and I would reject it in accordance with a policy that "tiny, trivial edits are discouraged."
When I was writing this question I clicked through a few pending edits in the edit queue and noticed a couple of other example of the same user correcting the spelling of "genrated" to "generated" which were both approved:
https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/8210955 https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/8211161
After noticing this I did a search for "genrated" and saw that as of the time of my search there were 682 results. My guess is that this user did something similar and is trying to systematically correct the misspelling of this word.
If behavior such as this is meant to be discouraged then it might be helpful to add something like "too trivial" as a rejection reason. On the other hand if this is encouraged (as I think it would be on a site like Wikipedia) then it might be helpful to clarify it in the guidelines somewhere since the other meta question I linked to suggests that what the editor is doing is inappropriate.
Overall I don't have a proposed solution and from what I've read in meta it looks like managing reviews is a topic of ongoing discussion. But I thought this example provided a good illustration of the ambiguity of the guidance for conducting reviews, and that perhaps that is something that could be addressed in some way in the future.