Background
While going through the Suggested Edit review queue about a month ago, I saw several edits from one particular user that all had the same summary: "changes in the form." I found an edit of his that was approved and left a comment for him (using @username since he was in the edit history) and politely asked him to start using more descriptive edit summaries.
His response to my comment was essentially, "if the edit isn't good enough, it will be rejected by the community." He wasn't rude, but I don't think he got the point that if the edits are more than just minor grammar/spelling/formatting fixes, we need a better edit summary that justifies the edit.
Just today, I saw a new edit suggestion from him that still uses the exact same edit summary. Every one of his other edit suggestions that I've looked at still use the same summary as well.
The Question
Is there anything else I can do to convince a user to start writing better edit summaries?
Note
I have read this MSO question: How to deal with editor who leaves no proper summary?, but the responses seem to focus on dealing with individual edits that don't have good summaries. I feel capable of addressing individual edits well enough, but I would like to help this user understand the value of edit summaries and start actually using them.