It's the result of quite a bit of testing.
A lot of stuff that ends up in the helper queue doesn't really belong there. Sometimes this is because there was nothing really wrong with the question, but often not.
"Should be improved" doesn't really convey what's next in line for the question, and is rather ambiguous in wording. While some questions are complete literary masterpieces, you can find something to improve in almost all of them, and that's not a great label for a button that tasks other people to spend time on stuff that actually needs help. Likewise, some really unclear questions should be improved, but most productively as a whole new attempt at the question, if the question author didn't find their answer in the 'related' links and vanish.
We're testing a small change to the wording that we feel better conveys what's actually involved in the improvement process. By clicking it, you're tasking editors to get to work on it, and the new tooltip reflects that:
I didn't make a big announcement about it because it's a very small tweak, and while I have solid hopes that it's going to cut down on the noise going into the helper queue, it'll be at least 7 - 10 days before we can do another manual review from a random sampling to see.
But yes, we're both comprehensively testing and working on the efficacy of both triage and the helper queues. Because it takes questions close to a week to find their ultimate 'fate', it's slow going, but we are doing it.
The wording will likely stay the same since it is quite a bit better (though the tool tip might be refined) - if you see subtle changes like this, it's an artifact of us working on both queues in an effort to make them work optimally.
I'll status-*
all the things once we're settled. For now, we're just doing a lot of iterative testing and tweaking.