This is about making FIXABLE questions a better experience for new community members.
Nothing the the rest of this text should imply that you can fix the unfixable or make the unanswerable answerable, or should handle unfixable off-topic stuff any other way than it is now.
Regarding the recent conversations about Stack Overflow's culture and how welcoming it is, there are a number of themes I'd like readers to consider. Below, I also propose a way in which voting can be reset to zero, in order to be forgiving of beginner mistakes.
Assimilation:
Assimilation is not about stripping the newcomers identity and culture from them, it is about them adopting new cultural norms into their own and reciprocating new norms into the culture.
So you want to be welcomed to a community, every community has standards and customs that if crossed will cause you to receive some unwelcomed feedback.
Imagine you are going to someone's house for the first time for dinner, a free dinner, enter that person's house with your shoes the first time you will get a polite please remove your shoes before entering, and maybe pointed to a sign that says Please remove your shoes before entering.
Now what do you do?
Apologise and remove your shoes and ask if there is anything else you need to be aware of before you commit another faux pas?
Tell the person you do not want to hear about having to take your shoes off you just want the free food and if you can not point them to the food stop telling them what to do.
Rant and tell the person you wiped your shoes off and argue that you have done enough to get in the house, you do not need to take your shoes off because you think they are clean enough. Which may not even be the reason they want the shoes off.
Get offended, go sulk in your corner of the internet and in the most passive/aggressive manner possible write twitter/blog posts about how unwelcome you feel because someone asked you to politely take your shoes off before entering their house and nothing more.
I could go on with a large list, I welcome others to edit this and add to it if they feel so inclined, but I think you get the picture.
Reciprocity
If you want to be more welcomed then you have to behave in a manner that deserves it.
Ignorance of what is expected of a new community member should be met with educational comments and direction. It does not have to be super-specific every tiny problem with their question, that would be too time-consuming.
Putting all the blame on the community members that have made the site what it is from their freely volunteered time is not justified. It is extremely offensive and counter productive.
So here is my new auto comment for How to Ask?
:
Please read How do I ask a question that is answerable? before attempting to ask more questions so you will be better prepared and able to ask a question in a way that will be well received and more importantly answerable. The more effort you put into communicating your question clearly the more effort you will receive in getting a useful answer. These guidelines are to help you succeed in participating the Stack Overflow community. 1
But what would be better is a message like this with a link that asks:
I want to know what I need to do to make my question answerable?
And give them a chance to redeem themselves; a Mulligan
, otherwise it stays on the site like now and probably continues to get down-voted into oblivion. This would show those that are monitoring and willing to help that they should expect the original poster to respond in kind, Reciprocity.
Feature Request: Mulligan
Mulligan - (in informal golf) an extra stroke allowed after a poor shot, not counted on the scorecard.
This would enable the community remove any punitive measures collectively:
I am convinced more than ever that some variation of my proposal "probationary period for questions to be answered" would foster a more welcoming moderation experience for new community members as well as provide more quality content as a side effect.
Remember the FIXABLE part from before? This is an important part of the concept!
If your question immediately gets down voted and close voted because it is Unclear or No MCVE, or other fixable reasons <<< (this is an important qualifier some seem to be selectively ignoring), it should be pulled from the main site into a queue for bronze/silver/gold badge holders in the main tag(s) to review and make suggestions for improvement. Before it gets completely closed and/or deleted. This applies to fixable questions only, just to stress that qualifier again since some seem to be missing the subtlety.
It gets it out of sight of the unwashed masses and stops the negative feedback that is built into the system and should show the asker we are here to help them succeed and not being punitive.
If it gets edited into shape a gold badge holder should be able to release it back into the wild with all the votes reset to 0
again so there are no penalties to their rep with a single click. Maybe two silver votes, three bronze or five votes total will reset it completely.
Create a Mulligan Badge that gets awarded for helping get questions in shape and positively received.
This approach of Let us help you help us will work, even if only for a few it would be better than doing nothing.
But there has to be reciprocity, the original poster must make some sincere effort to respond to the outreach of the community and attempt to assimilate. They have to show to interest in conforming and assimilating into the community.
Those that do not, well that is measurable and the questions will die on the vine and the system will deal with them like it does now, in the most unwelcoming way possible, a question ban. I would even go as far to say that anyone that got special hand holding like this and ignored it, especially multiple times, should be suspended from asking questions even quicker. It kind of demonstrates they are not interested on being a positive community contributor.
We already have an ad hoc group that does sort of this now:
There is already a culture of this mindset in the SOCVR room.
Specifically the reopen-pls that gets acted on quicker than any other request. The fact that that is a thing shows you this is the culture you want to encourage and support.
There are a lot of senior community members like myself that do not answer questions anymore, for various reasons, but mostly all the good questions have already been asked in the last 10 years. But we still want to contribute and maintain the investment we have made keeping the place up. Not so much after this blog post that states that we are all misogynistic, bigoted, racist aholes.
The fact that I am taking the time and effort to participate in meta still shows some residual amount of caring, it is not zero but close to it. When it goes to zero, I will be done for good.
What can I do to help you help me?
This is the culture you need to help the community make new members embrace.
Every person posting a question should be required to think What can I do to help you help me? and be completely open to receiving feedback on how to accomplish what they want, which is get help.
They should be reminded that every comment telling them what they need to do to make their question answerable, is someone taking their time to help them succeed.
Hammer on the concept of ANSWERABLE and nothing else!
Quality will take care of itself if things are answerable.
Welcoming environment will take care of itself if things are answerable.
Everyone wants an answer, if the powers that be try and rephrase the help and popup and everything else to explain. Here is how you get what you want as quickly as possible. It might help get the message across about why the standards and guidelines about how the site is to be used are important for them to focus on what makes their question ANSWERABLE.
Instead of blaming the community for poorly received participation in the community, there has to be at least as much blame put on those receiving the negative feedback if there has been attempts to educate them from the community.
It is very simple psychology 101:
Cater the selfish instinct that is human nature and teach everyone what is expected/required of them to participate and behave in a manner that is more welcomed and they will get less unwelcomed feeling feedback.
Give those in the community the tools, permission and most importantly the support to get the new members of the community up to speed as quickly as possible.
1I am sure there will be those that are looking to be offended that will infer all kinds of "implicit bias" and accuse me of whatever else in these instructions. They are looking to be offended and are never disappointed.