I think this is a really important and critical topic that StackExchange should put effort into addressing. I try to help newbies by formatting questions, asking clarifying questions, etc. But whether there are language barriers, understanding of what the site is for and how it works, etc.
Perhaps there should be a higher barrier to entry for people to ask questions until they have demonstrated sufficient understanding to do so.
All of us are ignorant at the start, but the tone on SO and others is devolving over time to be dismissive and exclusionary. This is not helpful for anyone -- even a down vote is a harsh and unwelcoming response. Some people are lazy and pasting in the question from their homework. Others may not have read the requirements for a valid question. Many are new developers who are still trying to figure out what their boss just asked them to do. Without knowing the language of engineering, people will not likely have the words to ask really well.
The people who are not asking "right" are either people who will never do so, or people who can be great members of the community if we guide them on gently. Perhaps until a user gets an up-voted question they are forced to prove they have done the things needed to ask correctly? Maybe there's a new reviewer queue for newbie questions? Maybe there's a required tutorial or test.
If anyone has any doubt that SO is being undermined by terrible quality questions, take a look at the top 10 latest questions on any keyword -- most from first-timers, most poorly formed, most not formatted, etc.
books
you all speak of? :-)