@Dharman several of those questions are old and may not qualify for a cv-pls, so what do you do about those? Just cast a vote and push them into the review queue?
Today's thought bubble: Would it be interesting (to people other than me), to write a SEDE query which shows the total number of bronze, silver, and gold LANGUAGE badges held by Stack Overflow moderators? I am curious about the length and depth of technological knowledge demonstrated by the current mod team. Is there already a SEDE query floating around that does this or similar?
What got me thinking about this is that on JSE (where I am a moderator), I do not consider myself to be an SME of Joomla, but I probably have more combined Stack Exchange experience than any other user there. We will have plenty of users with the inverse qualities -- Joomla SMEs that don't know very much about how Stack Exchange works.
Ideally, a mod team should consist of SE veterans with Subject Matter Expertise. Until my community has these unicorns, I think the best that we can hope for is "a mixed team" -- users who are SMEs and users who are SE veterans.
This line of thinking is factoring into my beliefs around what metrics should be shown on moderator candidacy nominations/cards.
@mickmackusa my two cents regarding SO is that a good moderator does not need any technological knowledge, this is not their task (the community/meta should handle issue where technological knowledge is required). A moderator on SO needs a good understanding about the community rulez (what is NAA, what is SPAM etc, how to deal with users etc) and then have great patience handling 100' of these flags every day.
@mickmackusa I'd expect the outcome to be correlated to the popularity of programming languages on the site at large. Anyway a SEDE query would be not easy to produce because you'd have to define what a "language" is
@PetterFriberg the only place where this falls short is probably maintenance that only moderators can do and that requires domain expertise, i.e. merging questions/answers.
Some good points mentioned. So far I don't disagree with anything said. I wonder if the domain knowledge is of greater important on narrow/niched communities. Stack Overflow has a huge scope, so it would be a herculean requirement for someone to be an expert in all on-topic realms.
Moderators have been know to ask for SME advice (on Meta, and in here and other, specialist chat-rooms) prior to making decisions on merging/closing/reopening questions.
I think we need a mod with at least a Haskell gold tag badge. ;-)
I have no experience in smaller community but I can immagine that it's more important, you probably have a task also to direct the way that the community should go.
I keep promoting to the Joomla "inner circle" to ask them to come forward and self-nominate as mod candidates in our 2022 moderator reboot, but the truth is that there are very few Joomla users who understand Stack Exchange.
Comparatively, SO doesn't need membership growth to thrive -- it already has critical mass. JSE is very much still in its growth phase, so my opinion is that a good mod to have would be someone who has a magical ability to shepherd new users to the community.
Agree, @tripleee Glorfindel would be highly qualified to weigh in.
@mickmackusa The current candidate score does include a bit of Meta-activity ... can't remember what it's called, but one of the badges is about Meta activity.
... "Convention" - 10 posts with a score of 2 or more on Meta.
Maybe a gold version of that badge would be better?
I used to work for a very large YMCA in the US when I was in my 20's. The CEO explained to me that there were 3 "C"s that where attractive when looking to fill Board Member positions. Cash, Clout, and Charisma. He said when you have those things, you can get a lot accomplished quickly.
@AdrianMole yeah, I feel that that is an underwhelming metric for someone who is a solid contributor to MSO.
Can you get a fanatic badge on MSO? Maybe a requirement should be that you have a fanatic badge on SO and MSO. After all, you need to be able to routinely contribute after you are elected.
I got my 25k privilege today. It's not very useful, but there's a very worrying trend that the number of answers is heavily declining. In 2021 we have been consistently receiving more questions than answers too.
@blackgreen Right. So we should try to build candidacy cards that brandish the awesomeness of their contributions prior to being mods. Discerning voters may prefer to have a meta-active mod others may want a "super-curator". The challenge is getting good comparable metrics so that we don't need to rely on users text to crunch the numbers behind their activity.
@Dharman I am not surprised that answers are declining. SO already has MILLIONS of questions and answers. Most new questions that I encounter don't need ANY new answers to resolve the problem. I think we are in Eternal Hammer-time.
@blackgreen So, broadly, how many relevant metrics should be tracked? 1. Contributions on Meta -- sure 2. Curations stats like flagging and closing -- sure. What else? I see asking and/or answering thousands of times to be rather irrelevant to a candidacy.
@blackgreen But there are a number of prominent (non-mod) users who do an incredible amount of site curation, but not in the 'formal' review queues. Those who cast close/reopen votes organically, edit posts and tag-Wikis, et cetera.
When a page gets deleted, if an answer on the page has at least 3 upvotes, does the answerer get to keep the rep? Is it the number of total upvotes or the total vote tally that determines if the answerer keeps the rep?
the mug would have been nice but I understand if they prefer international orders to contain less perishable goods (though it arrived in a honkin' big box via DHL anyway)
Back to my thoughts about SO mod candidacy... How much should it matter if a user shows significant contributions in other non-SO SE communities? I think showing broader understanding of SE and smaller communities can help the user to be "more understanding". Thoughts?
the basic dichotomy between depth and breadth is always challenging to resolve with a "one size fits all" answer; if the community currently lacks that sort of expertise then it's obviously more valuable than if not
Some candidates don't bother to show statistics, but I love seeing statistics. And if everyone has the exact same formatted statistics, it makes it easier for me to compare and evaluate my preferred candidate.
People can fudge the truth with creative speak and angles, and some people skill the about me pitch by nominating at the last minute. I'd like to see more standardised info on all candidates.
making contributions to other SE sites a conspicuous — even official — metric would be unfair to those who have a "laser-like focus". You're talking about SO mod candidacy after all
of course if you have diamond moderator experience on other sites, that is an added value which you as a candidate should bring up
should -> might want to
it's also true that other SE sites may or may not require different moderation practices
@tripleee That is certainly still authoritative and, to my knowledge, still working. No guarantee on SE devs not breaking it with all the changes they are making these days, though.
@mickmackusa Requiring users to fill out a form during nomination which has a box for answering each moderator Q&A that was selected (and setting rules that the answers can't just be links to past election nominations' answers) would help. I also think it would help for there to be a period of time (1-7 days) between nomination closing and the beginning of the voting period (as do many others; there were several requests for that feature/rule change on MSE and MSO).
If you haven't, I recommend finding those and upvoting them/adding an answer in support.
@mickmackusa significant contributions on other network sites is a bonus, but not a requirement. I think the reverse (significant contributions on SO when applying for moderator on another site) are substantially more important/influential, since SO is just orders of magnitude harder to moderator/curate than pretty much any other site.
For example, any multi-year regular/veteran of SOCVR, SOBotics, or Charcoal would probably be one of the best moderators any other site could hope to have, for the most part (there are some parts of moderation, like interpersonal behavior/bed-side manner, so to speak, that can't directly/fully be learned just by doing user moderation tasks/looking for spam or R/A content.
@AdrianMole A Haskell SME moderator would just spend all their time in the review queues; everyone knows Haskell exists purely to create good review queue audits
@TylerH I posted a comment explaining why it would be OB. How to accomplish the task is matter of design. There is no set specific, non-opinionated way to accomplish what the OP wants.
Many, many questions have more than one way to solve them... that doesn't make them opinion-based. How-to questions, especially, are open-ended/answerable in a number of ways by their very structure (OP doesn't know how, or they'd do it one particular way already).
@TylerH Again, this is a matter of design. The old "too broad" would fit as well, although we do not have that close reason anymore. I stand with my close vote and cv-request. It would be the same as "how do you send an email with X". Well, it depends. The question is simply not constrained enough.
@MFerguson only 20k+ users can review them, unfortunately for the editor
I don't think SME plays a huge role for the most part. The vast majority I see are adding a description to the excerpt or minor edits/updates to the main wiki
and many of the big ones have groups of users/communities that already maintain them
Something else that slows it down is checking to make sure it's not copied content. Lots of folks will just copy-pasta stuff for wikis and excerpts. Time consuming to ensure it's not
@Ruli it looks like it. At least OpenGL programming is and that problem seems a programming issue (aka how do I get messages on the right (UI) thread).