You're asking two questions here:
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Can we make this meta site work for mentoring?
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Can Meta Stack Overflow constructively answer the example questions about debugging and asking strategy?
The answer to #1 is yes. We've both seen it work, and frankly it works reasonably well... for teaching folks about Stack Overflow, the site, the culture, the people, the policies, even some of the idiosyncrasies of various subcultures.
But the answer to #2 is no - not without substantial changes to how it currently operates.
And not because of these downvotes everyone's talking about - voting is the least of the problems facing any attempt to turn MSO into a useful site for folks looking to learn how to solve specific problems using SO. Going on about newbs getting downvoted on Meta is a bit like lamenting that poor people in 3rd-world countries don't have iPhones - there's some amount of truth to it, but even if that is a problem it's the least of a long list of other issues facing them.
The elephant in the room here is simply that...
Meta Stack Overflow talks about Stack Overflow, but doesn't talk about the topics on Stack Overflow
That's become slightly less true since we broke MSE off, but... It's still pretty rare to see folks posting questions about the problems that arise in specific topics on Stack Overflow. Out of the last 50 questions asked here, I counted maybe 5 that were specific to Stack Overflow issues - and that's including two questions I suspect are more or less the same (topicality of installation/download questions) and a retag request, which I included because I'm pretty sure it's the only question there that might require any amount of topic-specific knowledge at all (not that it's getting any).
While in theory these "mentoring" questions are on-topic here, in practice they rarely get asked and even less often get an answer from someone who knows what they're talking about.
In my experience, most actual mentoring happens on Stack Overflow itself, in comments. jpmc26 latched onto this right away, wondering why we would want to redirect this to meta:
I'm left asking, "Why isn't this already happening via comments on low quality posts?" Shouldn't experienced users already be offering help and suggestions via comment? Even if a user doesn't know where to go, a little chatter in the comments between an experienced user and someone who is actually trying can go a long way to narrowing the problem and improving the question. On the other side, this assumes that the asker is interested in improving their question. If they're unresponsive, perhaps they're not?
And he's right. Convincing folks to leave Stack Overflow and go to some other site for such tutelage was, I'll admit, a long shot - but convincing them to go to some other site where essentially no examples of the questions they would ask are visible is a pipe dream. To make this work, we would have to essentially re-create meta from the ground up, a mere four months after we just did thatwe just did that.
Or, I suppose, we could figure out how to hook these educational comment threads into meta somehow. Maybe the way we do Area 51 discussions? That's a long shot, but let's face it: we built it and they didn't come, so if we want the folks doing this, we're gonna have to go to them.