Shoubhik R Maiti
I am currenly an undergrad studying chemistry. When I first joined this site, I was a high-school student. Now I am in university, and Chem.SE has been a big part of my academic journey (and it still is). I have asked a lot of questions to sate my curiosity and I have enjoyed answering a few as well. I also try to contribute to the site by editing posts to fix formatting etc. as much as I can.
Although I am not always active on the site, generally I will visit the site at least once or twice every day. I want to help moderate the site that has helped me so much :-)
- How would you deal with a user who produced a steady stream of valuable answers, but tends to generate a large number of arguments/flags from comments?
First I would look at the arguments and see what is the cause. If it's a user deliberately being disruptive, I would definitely warn them. (Repeated disregard of warnings would lead to suspension). Sometimes, it's not clear at a first glance. This site has users from many countries and not all of them have English as their first language. I have seen quite a lot of instances where users say something that appears curt or rude without meaning to (I have also done that on a few occasions I admit) and arguments might start from this. Basically, I plan to deal with stuff like this on a case-by-case basis.
- How would you handle a situation where another mod closed/deleted/etc. a question that you feel shouldn’t have been?
I would communicate with the other mod first. If we can't solve the argument between ourselves, and I *really* feel that a bad decision was taken, I would get the other mods involved.
- Quoting from the site tour: "Chemistry is a question and answer site for scientists, academics, teachers and students in the field of chemistry." The site clearly aims to be of interest to all chemists—from absolute beginners to reputable academics. Do you think this is truly possible? How would you ensure that beginners aren't turned away by incomprehensible research-level questions, while also enticing so-called "experts" to participate on a site with a lot of uninteresting high school questions? Alternatively, should these target audiences be separated somehow (by setting up a different site, for example)? Please note that I am not referring to being "welcoming", "friendly", or anything pertaining to the tone of interactions on the site. It goes without saying that rudeness is not OK, regardless of whom you are speaking to. I mean this as a more fundamental question about the target audience which the site wants to attract and cultivate.
I honestly don't believe that it's possible to have one site with one pool of Q/A's where both absolute beginners and reputable academics participate. The only thing possible is to reach a balance between the two. Yes, separating the sites is possible, or maybe we could split the site into separate threads, for beginner questions, intermediate questions, and research-level questions (or something similar to this).
Another idea could be to create a dedicated (persistent) chat room for high-school students. A lot of the questions that are downvoted or closed are generally homework questions (or simple questions that look like homework). The link for the chat room should be clearly visible on the right side of the site. (Having the chat button hidden in the context menu of the stackexchange button is really a bad idea, it just makes chat inaccessible—for some time after I joined this site, I was under the impression that the chat is only created for extended comments!) I think most of these homework questions are suited for the back-and-forth question and reply that is allowed in chat. (If the question is not suited for chat, the we can direct the user to ask it as a question.) I know there is a JEE room, but this is wider in scope. We can also add a link to the side of the new question page, advising high-school users to give it a try.
- Since about one or two years, four of the elected seven moderators no longer participate in the curation of this site. Why do you think their reasons would not apply to you?
To be honest, I don't really know why they have stopped participating. I cannot say with 100% certainty that my personal circumstances won't change in future, because I am not clairvoyant. What I can say is that I will be involved with chemistry for some time now, so there is no chance I will move to a different stream.
- In light of the new Matter Modeling site, and some users posting questions on both, what are your views on how the sites should interact? Should there be certain types of questions migrated to Matter Modeling? (e.g., that seem to be a better fit.. like ones specific to a particular program) How might cross-promotion work (e.g., some questions at Matter Modeling seem to be a better fit on Chem.SE)
I think MatterModellingSE is more suited for questions regarding solid state, modelling and quantum mechanics. Sure, there is certain overlap between the two sites, (for example questions regarding Gaussian etc.) but it's not too great. I believe questions around computational chemistry, and programs should be migrated to matter modelling.
I think we can make a guidance that cross-posts can be made only in cases where it's not clear which site is better suited for the question (following this post). As for questions on matter modelling which might be suitable for this site, we should let the users/mods on that site handle it.
- How would you handle an established user (say, a member for over six months and over 500 rep points) who is contributing in Q&A in a good faith, but keeps on ignoring site mechanisms and recommended notations? For example, they: post short comments and hints as answers; answer questions by editing them; misuse MathJax (e.g. \ce{pK_a}; \pu{H_2O}; \mathrm{c=n/V}); misuse Markdown (e.g. RANDOM excessive emphasis); don't bother with proper formatting (e.g. post a wall of text or formulas in text mode claiming LaTeX syntax is too hard); don't bother with proper references and post Google query links as such; do partial edits (e.g. only edit tags they are interested in, or do superfluous corrections ignoring blatant errors and text screenshots); write number of moles or just moles in place of amount of substance. You corrected them numerous times in comments or chat rooms. It seems a consensus is reached, but a week passes and it's back to square one. Your actions?
First of all, let me state that I don't think all of those actions are in the same category. For example, writing number of moles instead of amount of substance is bad, but posting Google query links as reference is much much worse than that! I personally feel that it's not worth getting worked up about minor problems.
If repeated suggestions to correct severe bad behaviour does not do anything, I would threaten them with suspension. If it still persists, I would suspend them, although I believe this would not be necessary. If someone is willing to contribute to the site for a long time, that means they care enough to stay on the site, so they should care enough about making the site readable. Disruptive users/trolls will lose interest very quickly and leave the site.
(Also, if posting short comments and hints as answer is a suspendable offence on this site, then some of the highest rep users have to be suspended for that! I personally don't believe it's a big issue, because it's not always possible to discern whether a contribution is sufficient enough to be a full answer, and sometimes people don't have the time to write a full answer but still wish to help)
- As a moderator you will probably have to mediate arguments on this site and its chat rooms. Have you ever yourself been in an argument with another user (on this site)? If yes, how did it come about and how was it handled in the end? Have you ever flared up on this site? If yes, how did it end? As a moderator how would you handle an argument/ someone being rude if it came to your notice?
I remember only one argument on this site. It happened a week ago I believe, where I asked a user to add more details to their question, and told them that it looked like a homework question. The user called me some names and told me that the user was quite old and it was not a homework question etc. I told them to not take it personally. They did not reply and the question was deleted shortly (by the user I presume). In hindsight, I admit that I could have written the comment in a nicer way.
No I don't think I have ever started an argument on this site (although I did get the urge to, sometimes :-). If an argument is brought to my notice, I will warn the user(s) 2-3 times, and then suspend them after that.
- How much time will you be able to dedicate to moderatorial issues? Do you think that being a moderator will take away from the way you are using the site now? Have you been active in chat? If not, will you reconsider and be more available to other users and also moderators via the site's chat rooms? (Hint: There is top-super-secret moderator chat room to coordinate efforts.)
I am studying a full time course, so I don't know how much time I will be able to dedicate. My free time varies throughout the year (due to exams, assignments etc.). I think I would be able to give a minimum of 4 hours a week for moderatorial issues on average, when I am free. I ask and answer questions sporadically (3-4 a month), so I don't think it will change the way I use the site to the most extent.
I haven't used the chat too often. If elected, I will try to be more active in the chat, at least for those times when I am online. I usually login to the site 2-3 times a day when I am free, and once a day, when I am busier.
- The website contains many many closely related if not identical questions, plus new questions probably related to old ones springing up every day. What is your editorial philosophy? For instance, should the site strive to be slim, with a minimalist set of questions, rejecting potential duplicates as much as possible, or somewhat inflated, accepting redundancy? What do you prioritize?
Yes, a minimalist set of questions is good enough. I don't think redundancy is necessary. In cases where the new question has some overlap with a previously answered question, we should direct the user to ask only the part of the question which is not covered by the other question.
- Do you believe your role is to improve the site by helping us to change it in some way? If so, what do you think warrants improvement, and what are your suggestions to address these issues?
Yes, I have some ideas about changing the site, see my answers to question (3). I admit that many of my ideas are not fully hashed out, so I would like all inputs on those matters.