I understand there is a legitimate purpose to making sure a user is paying attention when going through the review queues. However, in my opinion, a pre-requisite to doing this is to have some level of assurance that those audits are reasonable and predictable. This has been brought up before, but apparently is still not being done. Why waste review throughput on spurious audit questions?
Here is an example. This question appeared in the close audit queue. It was asked six days ago and had 11 up-votes (now it has some down votes).
At best, the question should have been edited for grammar and content by someone at some point. It's difficult to tell what the person is trying to get (what code will satisfy his requirements... indeed, what are his requirements?). At worst, it's off topic ("hey, tell me how to re-write my working code" is off-topic by definition). All of this has culminated in at least three answers, all of which have copious up-votes (after less than six days?) but none of which look similar nor have been accepted.
The Purpose of Audits
Audits have, ostensibly, one purpose - to prevent "robo-reviews" - meaning that they provide some degree of assurance that the user is actually voting in line with what others have thought. There are, in theory, a handful of algorithms which are selecting these questions from among those in the real world, and users are temporarily banned from reviewing as a result of failing too many audits (and that threshold is very low).
However, I think it's easy to argue that audits have a secondary purpose, and that is to train users to correct their decision making approach. As this discussion shows- an egregious example of a bad audit- the "audit failed" message says "There are no major problems with this question. You should click 'Leave Open' ..."
There is a term for this - when a student learns a skill, it's called "Transfer of Training." Transfer can be both positive and negative. Negative transfer of training occurs when a student is worse off for having learned the lesson.
So, if audits are going to serve as a learning purpose, in addition to an automated check, shouldn't there be some human involvement in cultivating good teaching examples?
To me, this question would not be a good candidate for an audit, and actually might be considered "negative transfer of training." I still think it should be closed, and I voted accordingly. What do you think?