16

Every day, we see hundreds of questions asked that are of such low-quality one might wonder why Stack Overflow even allows to post it. We keep closing and downvoting them, but the problem doesn't end. New users arrive and the ones that get banned just create another account and repost the same question. We need something to stop it.

I propose that Stack Overflow implements an entrance exam. Every account must go through such an exam before being able to post any questions.

It could look something like this. We present a user with a question and they must select one of few options, e.g. "Answerable", "Duplicate", "Unclear", "Not about programming". When a user answers correctly 5 times they gain a privilege to ask questions. We could sample questions automatically like we do in audits or we could have moderators select a range of questions. If every moderator selects 5-15 questions it should be enough to present a viable challenge even to returning users.

This would have several benefits:

  • Stop users who are in hurry.
  • Show examples of good questions to new users. There is the tour, but it is useless at this task.
  • Inform users what Stack Overflow is about. This is not a personal help assist. We are trying to collect a repository of questions and their answers.
  • Deter voting fraud. It's too easy to create new accounts. This is not a primary reason, but I hope it will help in a fight with users who create multiple accounts to answer their own questions.
  • Reduce the occurrence of the pattern: Ask, close, ban, recreate the account, ask again.
  • Maybe even reduce spam.

This is just an idea, but I would like to hear everyone's opinion. Would you like to see something like this being implemented and if not, why?

49
  • 2
    A new user will be able to post an "answer" without sitting this exam? Apr 9, 2021 at 22:40
  • 16
    I read "entrance exam" and thought oh no, not that discussion again ..., but the idea presented here, showing other questions to askers might be a good idea to give askers some way to reflect on the quality of their question Apr 9, 2021 at 22:41
  • 3
    "Maybe even reduce spam" - no, because spam is largely presented as answers, not as questions. It in general won't work towards what you think it will, because 375 questions (assuming 25 mods; couldn't be arsed to check how many there are) isn't a big enough sample. I can already think of several ways to bypass this, most of which rely on people sharing answers (which will happen). The only think this is gonna do is keep a lot of users away, but sufficiently motivated askers of trash are gonna do that in spite of this thin wall you're proposing
    – Zoe is on strike Mod
    Apr 9, 2021 at 22:46
  • 15
    Entrance exam sounds a bit of an overkill to me - it will only alienate people further and will be used on social media as a prime example of us being "elitist". That said, this can actually replace the current useless tour (it would probably be a good idea to add an incentive of 100 initial rep, just like the association bonus, for new users who successfully complete it). Apr 9, 2021 at 23:15
  • 24
    @OlegValter: They're already calling us elitist, so...I see this similar to how Concorde decided to raise ticket prices because everyone already assumed it was expensive. Phrased differently, we're already being called elitist, so doing yet another "elitist" thing to incur the ire of social media is a moot point.
    – Makoto
    Apr 9, 2021 at 23:20
  • 8
    Does this assume people posting poor questions do so because they don't know how to recognize a bad question? I'm pretty sure they do so because they don't care, they just want their problem solved.
    – Kaiido
    Apr 10, 2021 at 2:57
  • 18
    It's not the numbingly low level of skill/experience so much as those low-quality questions are posted continually. The same set, over, and over, and over again. The users posting those questions don't care about tours, tests, searching or anything except getting an answer for the minimum of their own effort. Searching for dupes is beneath them - the moronic, elitist, naive nerds can be easily conned into doing that grunt work, so why bother with it themselves? If any of the geeks complain and they are easily blasted as 'toxic' on social media. Apr 10, 2021 at 7:57
  • 3
    Yes, the barrier for entry ought to be raised (just a tiny, tiny, little bit), despite Atwood's famous original 2008 "no barrier for entry" declaration. It has already been raised once by requiring registration (that wasn't the case originally). Apr 10, 2021 at 17:19
  • 2
    Most of the bad questions could be dealt with by a FAQ popup and a new close reason: 'OP too selfish to read and act on the FAQ'. I can agree that an entrance exam is a non-starter, and so giga-dupes will continue to be posted. We need an easier way to dump them. Apr 10, 2021 at 18:09
  • 5
    @anon If they can Google the answers to the test then they can Google the solution to their problem.
    – Dharman Mod
    Apr 10, 2021 at 20:29
  • 2
    I disagree that it isn't the premise. The posts that are to be part of the "entrance exam" will have to be judged by un-experienced users, just like reviews and audits. How many meta posts do we have about wrong audits already? What if those chosen "entrance exams" are good Questions for some, but bad for others? I used to think that review training would be awesome for new users, but I don't think it is anymore. We're too divided on this.
    – Scratte
    Apr 10, 2021 at 20:39
  • 2
    @Dharman "If they can Google" - not sure that's true. Googling answers to exam questions does not take much expertise (if any at all). However, being able to correctly search for a solution for a given problem is a skill such people usually lack (knowing the appropriate terminology, for example). I'd say one does not entail the other at all. Apr 10, 2021 at 21:05
  • 8
    I'd like to see something, but I don't think your suggestion is it. But if it's an opt-in thing, where the successful newbies get a badge and some bonus points, as Oleg suggested (although maybe 50 points rather than 100), it might be beneficial. It wouldn't get rid of the rubbish, but it could help the more sincere newbies to have a more positive on-boarding experience.
    – PM 2Ring
    Apr 10, 2021 at 21:19
  • 4
    The title would imply that you'd need an exam to access the site in general... but it's specifically about asking questions. "Exam"... egh. I don't like that name, it harkens back too much to the school days. Call it an interactive tutorial. People seem to love tutorials for whatever reason, a tutorial is probably part of the reason for the target audience of this FR needing Stack Overflow in the first place ;)
    – Gimby
    Apr 12, 2021 at 16:01
  • 3
    @AdrianMole Yes. A user with some experience should have no problem quickly passing it.
    – Dharman Mod
    Sep 12, 2021 at 20:13

9 Answers 9

36

The only thing that can stop the influx of users who don't really know what's going on with the site or how to use it is for the company to realize, accept and own that this is something that they have to actually confront head-on as a matter of their own survival, not us volunteers who have already gone through this cycle for the umpteenth time trying to spitball ideas that we know, somewhere in the deepest darkest pits of our stomachs, have about a snowball's chance in Hell of actually working.

Case in point: they missed an opportunity to do this the last time they engaged with students/newer users. Here's hoping they don't next time, if there can be a next time.

15

Even though the idea tingles me, I don't think it's ever going to work.

1. It makes the community look like elitists, which will result in a massive amount of social network outrage, flames, civil wars, public hangings and the like. Even if the dust will settle eventually, I don't think the company will want that level of disruption.

2. high-rep users can still ask bad questions. The problem doesn't affect new accounts, specifically. Someone who can't be bothered to go through a tutorial before asking basic questions, will ask a slew of bad questions in the [X] tag the day they decide to learn X, without having to go through an "entrance exam".

3. the company needs the metrics, no need to pretend they don't, unless it becomes a non-profit based on donations from "club members". Then SO becomes just that, a private club, and also see point #1.

[warning: unpopular opinion] 4. low-rep answerers need the bad questions, because:

  • 4a. not all bad questions are abysmal questions, and may be just answered
  • 4b. not everyone has a 1000+ score answer from 2012 to what today would be considered a bad question about how to convert a number to a string in [programming language]
  • 4c. you do want more people to gain enough rep to help you with the site curation. But if those people have to wait for the good questions, you'll also have to wait for that help. Yes, if there's fewer bad content, there's less curation work for you, but I don't think we can rely on this assumption. And no, it's not true that posting great answers by itself is enough to gain the rep, because reputation comes from visibility (in life, not just in here), not from quality alone. I could post a fantastic answer to a super obscure bug that affects two people this year and help them avoid spending the next 3 months debugging stuff and losing clients, and that would net me +35.

And lastly: 5. if a question is really bad the OP likely won't get the answer they want, simply because it can't be given. They will end up punished by their own lack of effort, and trust me, more often than not this will feel frustrating for them more than curating their questions feels frustrating for you. Unclear, poorly formatted, poorly researched questions make it impossible to get good answers by themselves, even if you don't close them.

So I don't think an entry exam is necessary at all. If you really want change something, please remove the -1 rep cost when downvoting answers in the review queues.

6
  • 4
    Counter argument to #1 is that leaving the floodgates open allows anything to continue to get posted and more bad user experiences occur and they run off and rant and flame anyway.
    – charlietfl
    Apr 10, 2021 at 21:27
  • 3
    @charlietfl that's the eternal clash between people who value quality and people who don't, or even, between people who value a community as a collective Good (capital G) and those who value it as a means to satisfy a personal need. I'm afraid this clash isn't bound to be solved here
    – blackgreen Mod
    Apr 10, 2021 at 21:31
  • 1
    Just FYI the goal is not to punish users. The goal is to stop the flow of poorly written questions. I understand what you are trying to say with point number 4 but you can still gain reputation by answering only selected questions, just much more slowly. I doubt that people amassing rep quickly have curation efforts in mind. I know it's the reason why I have 20k rep, but I see users with 100k and I have no idea what they use it for.
    – Dharman Mod
    Apr 10, 2021 at 21:35
  • Agree but letting quality continue to slide is not in the company's best interest either. New customers is not the only important metirc in a business model....conversion and churn rates are also important
    – charlietfl
    Apr 10, 2021 at 21:36
  • @Dharman I'm one of those who, as you say, answers only selected questions (well, 90% of the time) precisely because I believe in the QA/QC effort you're talking about. But if you take a look at my profile, you can see that a significant portion of my answers do appear under less-than-stellar questions. So what's left if we take those away... but yeah, I know you know what I'm trying to say
    – blackgreen Mod
    Apr 10, 2021 at 21:43
  • 2
    "2. high-rep users can still ask bad questions" - definitely, especially if most of the rep came from answering easy questions. Reputation points prove diddly squat about what intentions the person leasing them has.
    – Gimby
    Apr 12, 2021 at 15:06
10

I really don't like the way you worded it as an entrance exam, but the idea of providing an interactive tutorial to new users I think is worthy for discussion. Something similar to what you have suggested but:

  • Would be static, the same for everyone, possibly sourced from real questions or answers that have already been judged in the review queue.
    • The reason for a static experience is there is less chance a curated list of good/bad posts would be mistakenly judged incorrectly. Incorrect closures happen in the review queues periodically.
  • If you get the answer wrong, it lets you try again until you get it right
  • Whether you pick the right or wrong answer it explains why your choice is right or wrong.
  • Would be short, two or three questions, five max. This shouldn't take more than five minutes to complete.
  • It shows for your first question/answer, but perhaps a link or clickable button on the Ask/Answer Question forms would allow users to easily find the tutorial again if they skip it and find their posts are getting closed or deleted.
  • Potentially offer a Skip button, though I'm on the fence whether that would deteriorate the value of this suggestion too much.
  • Gamify the tutorial by providing Score (like +5) and/or a badge on first completion. This becomes a bit more valuable if the tutorial is made optional.
  • A link to the tutorial would be provided in the banner on closed or deleted posts.
  • The tutorial should include links to the How to Ask/Answer FAQ pages.

Calling it a mandatory exam I think would promote an elitist view of the community from the outside as others have mentioned. A tutorial solution would put the posting guidelines in front of new members in a way that doesn't teach them via a "trial by fire" (as in posting poor quality questions/answers), leading to unnecessary moderation in order for the poster to understand why their post was removed.

Yes, there are guidelines you can read but as is the case at many of our jobs, end users tend not to read the documentation in our line of work. This would be more engaging than "read the FAQ" and take less time to go through than reading and processing multiple FAQ pages which users aren't looking for; most of the time they have a question and just want an answer.

As many folks don't take the time to read these, they come to the site with a fundamental misunderstanding of how the community works. Their posts get downvoted or closed, the user gets frustrated or feels unwelcome and may stop participating altogether. We don't want this, we want their participation. A tutorial presented during their first question and answer posts wouldn't eliminate this entirely, but would be a more inclusive and engaging way to teach serious new users how to engage amicably with the community in a fun, interactive way.

2
  • As previously stated, the downside of a static tutorial is that eventually it’s easy to Google “stackoverflow entrance tutorial answers” and effectively skip it. However, your suggestion sounds like you want it to be optional and your final paragraph does explain how this may be useful. I still have my doubts when considering the cost and benefits of this suggestion… Sep 10, 2021 at 21:36
  • 1
    I think that is only a risk if it's an exam, a rite of entry so to speak, as presented in the original question. I feel If you get the answer wrong, it lets you try again until you get it right addresses this because it's not a quiz; you can't get it wrong and if you do, it would explain why it's not the correct answer and you simply try again. I'm proposing a guidance tool, not a competency gate.
    – codewario
    Sep 10, 2021 at 21:43
5

Surely it needs an exam, but not for the people who ask but for the people who are willing to answer. After all, bad questions can be dealt with. There are zounds of volunteers who act like a human-powered AI, casting votes being triggered by certain words and phrases in the question.

While it's bad answers which is the real plague.

And an exam, similar to the one used to test people who are casting close votes, would really help.

But in time you will realize that no such exam will be implemented on this site of Stack Overflow. Because bad answers are not an unwanted side effect - this is how this site is designed to work. Stack Overflow has never been aimed at quality. Every single mechanism, rule, or custom here is aimed towards providing answers, gaining reputation and badges, and enforcing some formal code. But none even touch the subject of quality.

The suggestion you were given in your other question, is Stack Overflow in a nutshell:

Vote and move on

Over the span of all those years, many people tried to shatter this foundation of indifference, all in vain. It didn't even flinch. Surely a Q&A site that will proclaim quality as its goal will bury Stack Overflow in no time. But there is none yet.

4

80% - 90% of First posts are full of typos.

I just did another 900 First post reviews over the last week. There should, at least, be a check for a percentage of typos especially if every word in the post starts with a capital letter.

In those cases users should be presented with a large red flashing neon saying:

You correct the typos or you no post!!!

A grammar school level exam could be a plus. Do you capitalize the i or do you not capitalize the I?

6
  • 2
    Or, you know, just correct them outright for the poster (and let them preview to avoid false positives) :) We, as editors, already have a bunch of tools that are battle-tested - SE could just ask us... Sep 10, 2021 at 18:02
  • 1
    What action did you take on those 80% - 90%? "Share feedback" does not seem to cover this (though some of them probably have other problems that are covered). Sep 10, 2021 at 19:40
  • @PeterMortensen I guess I've done around 85% edits overall.
    – bad_coder
    Sep 10, 2021 at 20:01
  • To give them the benefit of the doubt (normal meaning of doubt), they may be used to other platforms where it is not possible to change anything after submit, not even in the first few minutes (e.g., IRC, most forums (e.g. phpBB), older versions of Microsoft VSTS (now Azure DevOps), etc.) or where it is too well hidden (e.g., YouTube). They may not even know what "edit" means (unknown concept). - Oct 24, 2021 at 15:13
  • cont’ - Though it could just be another symptom of the minimum effort attitude. Or they do it deliberately for some unknown reason (some kind of signalling - to look "smart"?) Oct 24, 2021 at 15:14
  • @PeterMortensen whatever the motive, additional system checks on the more common typos would benefit editors/readers downstream.
    – bad_coder
    Oct 24, 2021 at 16:01
1

Every day, we see hundreds of questions asked that are of such low-quality one might wonder why Stack Overflow even allows to post it. We keep closing and downvoting them, but the problem doesn't end. New users arrive and the ones that get banned just create another account and repost the same question. We need something to stop it.

Yes, everyday low quality questions are asked. It's a bit frustrating, and it is endless.

I propose that Stack Overflow implements an entrance exam. Every account must go through such an exam before being able to post any questions.

The reality is that such an exam may seem like a good idea but has a lot of downsides. Firstly, Stack Overflow is a company. They need to make money, and part of that comes from user signups.

It's not even a bad thing: they literally need users to signup in order to keep the site running. No user signups = no revenue for Stack Overflow = No site.

Not only that, but if there were less user signups, we wouldn't get any new questions, even the good questions that we get. Because 99% of question askers aren't willing to go through a test to ask one question on a site.

If a test (or something similar to this) was presented to a new user, there would be a significant drop in new user signups. Nobody wants to complete even a 5 question test to be able to ask one question on a site. It's just not worth their "precious" time.

Who would want to read through 5 pages of text, and go through a vast FAQ just to ask one question?

I like the idea, but this is likely to never be implemented, and if it were implemented, it's almost like a self destruct button.

6
  • 4
    'Who would want to read through 5 pages of text, and go through a vast FAQ just to ask one question?' - those who don't want their mega-dupes summarily downvoted, closed and deleted? Those with above-zero consideration for other users? Those without a demagnetized moral compass? Apr 10, 2021 at 18:05
  • ...Those who dump their walls of code and expect us to do the same for them?
    – Tomerikoo
    Apr 10, 2021 at 20:24
  • @MartinJames certainly not me to ask one question. Stack exists to help programmers, and it just makes no sense to waste the time of those who want to ask a single question.
    – 10 Rep
    Apr 11, 2021 at 3:26
  • @10Rep oh sure, much better to waste someone else's time:( Apr 11, 2021 at 8:36
  • @MartinJames I mean as a volunteer we've just accepted it. I
    – 10 Rep
    Apr 11, 2021 at 16:01
  • @MartinJames plus, to understand from the company's perspective. They literally need user signups. So it's not fair to implement this, right?
    – 10 Rep
    Apr 11, 2021 at 16:39
1

Stop users who are in hurry.

If a person is in a hurry, an exam likely won't change that. It might cause the asker to further rush the question writing process with a mind that they already spent too much time on the exam they didn't ask for.

Of course, I'm not saying users asking questions in a hurry causing them to be poorly written are fine, it's just that an exam might make it worse.

0

It seems inescapable that any such exam would also drive away some people who would otherwise post good questions, be it due to giving up after not getting through the challenge, or to understandably not wanting to spend time studying Stack Overflow arcana in order to pass a test. That suffices to put me off it.

0

Do it with a video!

If someone, particularly entry level, wants free help and isn't willing to put the effort into watching a short video that highlights some of the basic expectations then chances are they aren't willing to put the proper effort into a reasonable quality question either.

A short video that shows me how to fix something on my car is a lot more comforting and less time consuming than laboring through a list of instructions and confusing diagrams in a manual.

The whole help center could be greatly improved with a collection of well produced videos.

Sure there are issues like language barriers and jumping to the end without watching but they can easily be resolved.

A very simple fun quiz based on the video content where the moderator feeds you the answers should be quite tolerable compared to a dry read-only wall of text

They put "Some assembly required" messages on many product packages. SO definitely needs a sign on the door indicating "Some effort required". People are far more apt to absorb that message when spoken to than by reading it.

9
  • With static video content, very soon web sites will come into existence with answers to the quiz(es). Then the barrier will only be the effort required to find and open some other web page, read the answers, etc. (it may deter the minimum-effort users). Apr 10, 2021 at 17:25
  • 1
    @PeterMortensen Not an insurmountable problem with a bit of creativity.
    – charlietfl
    Apr 10, 2021 at 17:32
  • 7
    As someone who loathes videos for things that have no reason to be video-based, this would make me far less likely to contribute. Apr 12, 2021 at 19:35
  • @JohnMontgomery That's fair but to each their own. The old picture = 1000 words works for many people, particularly when dealing with a new environment
    – charlietfl
    Apr 13, 2021 at 0:04
  • 1
    @charlietfl Sure, but forcing it on people is a different matter (which is part of why I hate that trend so much, since it's caused a decline in the much-easier-for-me text guides). Apr 13, 2021 at 0:14
  • 2
    @JohnMontgomery So it could be a choice, read or watch. You might find your preferences are not those of the majority or maybe they are...don't know. Very clear a lot of people do not read around here
    – charlietfl
    Apr 13, 2021 at 0:17
  • 2
    @JohnMontgomery as someone who loathes having to read through a giant wall of text, I would be less likely to contribute. it goes both ways. I think there should be two options.
    – 10 Rep
    Apr 13, 2021 at 17:26
  • @10Rep Now you're asking for twice as much work to implement it. All the more reason why having an "entrance exam" is a bad idea. Apr 13, 2021 at 17:39
  • 1
    I love the idea of a video explanation. It feels like a far more efficient way to convey information and a lot of people prefer video explainations. Kinda feel like SO should have a youtube channel. Apr 14, 2021 at 14:41

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