I guess this will turn into confession/whining thread ;) - but for me Stack Overflow lately feels like a grind because there are just too many great developers around.
When you look at the incoming question queue it's quite likely that most questions are already answered in a span of minutes.
And it's natural that with so many great developers around to answer questions on a regular basis it's quite likely that you'll get your share of "bad questions". Simply, instead of spending hours reading tutorials, people see that there is large group of people willing to answer questions - so they post. And someone who is just starting learning a certain language/technology obviously won't ask some advanced questions. He'll ask the most basic questions he could've find the answer to if he read ANY beginner's book on the subject.
So, as others are saying - I doubt there is anything you or moderators can do... We all need to suck it up and keep dealing with "bad questions" the best we can. Ironically, my last answer is on a question that can be considered bad:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/35097769/i-need-help-printing-to-a-text-box-in-c-sharp-and-winforms/35097831#35097831
But, on the other hand, looking back at my own personal journey of learning to code, I would be thrilled if Stack Overflow existed and if there were people willing to answer questions. I was actually quite frustrated with "close phase" of Stack Overflow few years back - I remember moderators/voters closing what felt like 50%+ of questions (found this thread from 2013... "my feels like 50%+" was 20%+ instead)
In that light, I think we all should look at new users and their questions with a little compassion - when you see a user who is new / has reputation under 100 - give him a chance. Let him post a question or two that is "bad". And as he is posting questions people will nudge him in a right way - in a sense welcome him to the community and give him a chance to learn how to properly ask questions.
EDIT: I guess I should brace for downvotes on all my answers ;). Anyway, I've re-read that Robert Harvey's answer you've linked several times and unlike you, I quite disagree with it. For me it is way too assuming and exclusive. I see that problem in general with "hardliners" here on Stack Overflow - they look at whole site kind of like a museum.
On one hand I find that attitude quite helpful - Stack Overflow would end up being another spammy forum if it wasn't for people like Robert. From that POV I am quite grateful for people like him.
But on the other hand, it is a double-edged sword - post unpopular opinion that asks for compassion and goes against "common vision" like I've done here and you'll be greeted with nitpicking and serial downvotes. And, as @Drew points out in his comment - if your personal belief guides you to spend time helping on "bad questions", be prepared to have your answer deleted.
So, in the end, I guess it boils down to - you, I and other people who spend their time trying to answer questions can't do much. It's unrealistic to expect that we can educate ALL new users on posting "great" question that comes anywhere near what Robert wants. Anything that deals with this problem would likely need to come down from site creators - it would probably be an improvement to already existing review queues.
In the meantime, we'll just keep running through this loop as we have done before:
what can be done to help educate these new users before their question makes it into the queue?
In the vast majority of cases, nothing. It seems like that's the lesson that you need to learn. Yes, there will be occasional people who are actually willing to accept constructive criticism, are willing to be coached, and could end up with a good question as a result. But the vast majority simply have no interest in getting anything but code that they can copy-paste to solve their problem. You need to learn to better identify people who are worth the time, and when to give up on a lost cause.