"It is September once again... and once again students are asking their homework problems..."
How about we help site newcomers learn to properly ask questions by spending few minutes in review queue and voting to close inappropriate ones more quickly. You can think of this as a kind of lightweight complement to various educational, welcoming, and mentoring initiatives that appear to be so popular of late.
Here are two queue filters that seem to be easiest to find and review troublesome questions: too broad and unclear. Of these two filters, the first one feels slightly more efficient to me, but I wouldn't bet on that - so I guess it's really up to you to pick.
For those having more time, another queue filter is probably most useful from the asker's perspective, because the custom close reasons tend to provide very accurate and easy-to-follow guidance: off-topic. I abstain from recommending it to everyone (nor do I frequently use it myself) because in my experiments it appeared to be noticeably slower than other filters listed above (and just in case if you wonder - no, I am not going to waste my time asking the dev team to fix that).
I am not going to load this suggestion with "success metrics", "progress indicators", "milestone definitions", and other stuff like that, because, per my recollection of a prior, somewhat similar effort, it didn't look particularly useful.
- If you just make a few short visits to the close vote queue for a couple of days, that would be cool.
At first I was going to end this suggestion with a lengthy explanation of how the timely closing of inappropriate questions is helpful to new users - both askers and answerers. It really is, and if I posted this a year or two ago, I would maybe provide a thorough explanation of why that is so, with proper reasoning, examples, and references to other meta discussions, etc.
But then I thought, no - today things are different and what I really want now is for us to somehow balance various misleading ideas and suggestions about the welcoming effort that seem to be spreading around lately. So be it.
As an optional supplement, a few productivity tips for those willing to participate:
- Skip review when you doubt that the question is worth closing (there is no shame in that).
When I am particularly short on time I even fall back to blindly skipping all questions that are longer than 6-7 lines. I'm sure that this way I miss some close-worthy ones, but it speeds up things so much and, which is critically important, it keeps me certain about the votes I do cast, because I read and understand the question entirely. Even though there are other voters to keep things going right despite my occasional mistakes, I don't accept urgency as an excuse for wrong close votes. - Skip and avoid wasting time on questions that look like they are worth leaving open.
Proper decision on these tends to take more time and (most importantly) these are likely to expire off the queue and stay open without your involvement anyway. (if you think this also means that many close-worthy questions expire and stay open, keeping their askers unaware of the problem, well, it is indeed so). - If you fail an audit, try to slow down, or better yet, take a short rest.
I know there are slippery audits and I always manually correct the audited post if it feels wrong, so that it won't trick the next reviewer - no matter if I fail or pass. But when I fail, that is also always an indication that I am not in good enough shape and need to do something about myself to improve focus (or take a rest if I can't). I have done several tens of thousands of reviews, and treating audit failures as signs that I need to be more attentive has been extremely helpful.