One of the challenges the community has (and one of the reasons why Meta exists) is that the community as a whole doesn't agree 100% on what constitutes a good question. In some cases the differences are minor, but there are some can be polar opposites (code vs no code, what is a resource request, what is considered opinion based, are code review questions acceptable, any many more). *
So I see 2 possible issues arising due to this problem
- A mentor, believing one set of guidelines, helps a new user to ask a question in a certain whyway or give the impression the question is on-topic and acceptable. But the community downvotes the question and the new user is still discouraged and is now mad at the mentor.
- 2 (or more) different mentors in the same room feel differently about a specific user's question and provide conflicting guidance. The new user is still discouraged and is also confused.
This may be another scenario that you just have to wait and see how often this happens (the first bullet is almost guaranteed to happen, and the 2nd may be a problem as well, just less of an issue). But I think it is something you need to be prepared to handle with guidance for the user on how to handle conflicting info or mentors who are just wrong about how to ask a good question.