Well, tell them it is a forum!
...in the same way that City Hall is a forum, or their highschool mathematics class was a forum. Folks come here all the time to interact and share information and ideas, just like they do in every other forum... They're just expected to do so in a fairly focused manner, and aren't going to do well if they ignore that.
Look, this is one of those terminology questions that tend to send folks on a hunt for the right "magic words" that'll instantly convey understanding and agreement... And that's a lost cause; you ain't gonna convince someone that SO is great by telling them it's a Q&A site, any more than you're gonna convince a picky kid to eat their cucumber and tomato salad by telling them it's a fruit salad. There are layers of potential pedantry here, but strip 'em away and what you tend to end up with is a fundamental misunderstanding of why folks on this site expect what they do and why the site supports them.
Pedantry vs purpose
The whole "Stack Overflow is not a forum" thing goes back to the primeval days of the site, when it both looked and acted a hell of a lot more like a traditional discussion board than it does now: folks would leave replies to answers in other answers, create big ol' "list your favorite X" threads, ask tons of impossibly broad questions... The software kinda discouraged it, but not very much: truth is, you could totally use this site like folks use any other Internet forum if you really wanted to. We - collectively - just don't let each other do that. And a big part of that comes from reminding ourselves that we're different, that we're here to do something different, and that we're doing all that precisely because the default "forum" on the 'Net is... really awful.
Folks generally assume that "forum" means "disorganized trash-heap where everyone talks at once, uses 2-page signatures, and the answer you're looking for is somewhere between pages 30 and 97"... That is, unfortunately, the lowest common denominator for forums on the 'Net, but it's born out of a sort of tragedy of the commons that occurs when no one particularly cares about doing better. Forums are easy to participate in because no-one stops you from doing anything... But they're a headache to get anything useful back out of, because... Well, because no one stops anyone from dumping whatever the hell they want into it.
We want to do better; everything else follows from that. Specifically, we wanted to build a place where, if you find a previous thread that matches the question you're researching, you'll likely find an answer on the same page as the question itself - preferably right underneath the question. So we rigorously enforce a few requirements that are either ignored or given no more than lip service everywhere else:
We expect answers to directly answer the question asked, because otherwise you waste the first page in nonsense discussions about clarifying problem, the asker's avatar, the weather, some sports team...
We don't allow follow-up questions in answers, both because they tend to not get answered and because they're a pain to ever find again if they do get answered.
We want clear focused questions: if we don't allow 2 pages of back-and-forth discussion to draw out the scenario, it better be in the question or everyone's just gonna have to guess.
We close duplicate questions, and link to the originals - y'know that one guy on every forum who's answered every question for the last 5 years with "this has been discussed a hundred times already, use search!" but all search turns up is other questions he's posted the same answer to? Yeah, screw that guy. It's great to refer folks back to a great answer, but only if you give 'em a fast, unambiguous way to find it.
We don't let people comment unless they've a) written the post they're commenting on or b) demonstrated that they know something of relevance. Because otherwise you just get 1,000,000 comments about the weather and the size of various bits of anatomy and no one can stand to read far enough to get to the answers. There are thousands upon thousands of unanswered questions; if you can't answer 5 of them, chances are you can't ask a useful clarifying question in a comment either.
All of these are restrictions that usually aren't found on your normal Internet forum, and all of them came about after Stack Overflow launched - we decided to make them part of what Stack Overflow is.
In short, Stack Overflow isn't a forum because we - you & me & that guy over there & thousands of people we've never met - collectively decided to make it "not a forum". The software doesn't care whether or not we call it a forum or use it as one; the things that differentiate it from every other forum on the 'Net are myriad little decisions that we've all made and continue to make each day, for reasons that we've all kinda started to take for granted a bit.
But it's those reasons, those 1001 little decisions, that define our purpose - and if you want to teach someone who doesn't already know them how to understand us, it's the reasons that you have to convey... If they can understand those, they can call it whatever the hell they want.
site:stackoverflow.com search terms
is pretty good on google.[tour]
or[how-to-ask]
but barge in, dump their homework/requirement/bug-ridden code without any comment, and demand an answer "urgent plz"? They indeed have reason to describe their experience as 'not helpful' and 'unwelcoming'. And I say, Yay to that.