I see a handful of types of new users that this would apply to.
1) The Ask and Go User
This user asks their question and leaves. They don't respond to comments, they don't respond to votes, they don't respond to edits, and they don't respond to answers. They simply post the question, and then check back in a day or two to try any answers. If they interact with the site again in any way, it would be unsurprising if it was with a different, and unregistered, account.
These notifications would matter not for this user. They would likely use an unregistered a throwaway account, never use it again, and therefore never even see the notifications about the close votes. Even if they saw them, they wouldn't pay any attention to the reasons or try to learn from them.
2) The "Help Vampire" User
To this user, Stack Overflow is only here to answer their questions. Their question can be utter crap, yet they require an answer to it. If their question is so much as looked at wrong, they will get agitated and demand an explanation in the comments, potentially (though not always) causing unnecessary discussion in the comments that can quite easily devolve into an argument.
Notifications of close votes would potentially enrage this user. As they see Stack Overflow as a help site and not a site with defined rules and guidelines, they would potentially see this as a sign of the rumored "elitism" on Stack Overflow.
However, some users that fall into this category could potentially be helped by these notifications. These notifications, and a brief discussion in the comments about the close reasons, could potentially help these particular users see that Stack Overflow is not a help site and has a quality standard to which their question must abide.
It's hard to say, from my perspective, which outcome is more likely with this class of user, but it is largely going to be a case-by-case scenario.
3) The Troll and The Spammer
I'm lumping these two together as one class because the notifications would mean the same to them: Absolutely nothing. In theory, at least in my mind, a "troll" question in this case would be one posted by a user who knowingly posted an off-topic questions just to enrage other users. Either case is likely to get shut down very quickly, but in both cases the notification would do absolutely nothing for the low rep user.
4) The Misinformed User
This user simply does not understand that they have done something wrong. Perhaps they just did not provide enough information, or they have worded their question in a way that makes it sound off-topic when it really isn't. Maybe they are not a native English speaker and did not realize that the way they phrased their question did not convey what they really meant. The user has tried to understand what Stack Overflow is for, and has at least looked at a few questions before asking their own, but something just hasn't quite hit home for them yet.
Users in this class can potentially be helped by these notifications. They can see the close reasons and try to understand how they apply to their question. If they don't, they can ask in the comments for clarification. These users would, hopefully, be willing to learn and become productive members of the community.
These users can still react poorly, of course. These users could misunderstand downvotes and close votes and take them personally, leading to the potential arguments mentioned in class 2. This class of user is by no means a perfect class- We are all humans, after all, and humans are in no way perfect. Misunderstandings and arguments can still occur.
Conclusion
These notifications could potentially help newer users... In some cases, at least. I feel like class 2 users outnumber class 4, however, and that the angrier class 2 users outnumber the calmer ones.
I feel, personally, that these notifications would cause a bit more trouble than they would fix or would be completely ignored and wouldn't help at all. Others may disagree, of course, but is this something that is worth developer time? Do the potential positives outweigh potential negatives and potential pointlessness? I don't think we'd help enough users to be near worthwhile.
If the suggestion was only to remove the reputation restriction to see close/reopen votes on one's own question, I would have far less problems with this, as it would likely be a simple change for the team. If that were the case, I would suggest that the ability to cast those votes on one's own question remain locked to 250 rep and above, as new users may misunderstand and attempt to "close" their question when it was solved, or try to incorrectly reopen their question when it was closed.
Note: This answer assumes the case of 100% correct close votes. There are of course cases of incorrect close votes, and those would be a (potentially small) problem all their own.