The Problem
The site is struggling to maintain its identity and usefulness as it is increasingly flooded with questions (and answer) from non-programmers. Several Meta users have been working to bring attention to the problem:
Knuth bless 'em for trying to do something fantastic with their lives, [but] they've become quite a drain on us and other resources.
and
You're seeing something I've been talking about for a while, and it boils down to the motivation people find to become programmers...Folks are entering this field not because they have any real drive, love or talent for the craft, but because they want the financial security and social notoriety that comes with the job. They're not ever going to be good programmers because they probably aren't ever going to think like one.
I'm seeing a rapid trend towards worse and worse question quality. It gets to the point where I'm asking myself *"Why did I even help this guy? He neither has the will nor the capacity to understand the answer; I have just been wasting my time". That happens more and more often lately and is pretty frustrating.
The influx of cargo-culting morons I constantly have to dismiss from interviews because they can't actually solve problems / write code pretty much reflects the problem. SO has turned into 98% "Give me teh fish" with people who don't care about the site gleefully handing out fish because of imaginary internet points. That's not what the core values and guidelines of the site supposedly state / represent.
The established users are increasingly becoming janitors. In my opinion, the increasing load of housekeeping work is a tedious distraction from the real purpose of the site; it leads to discontent and, in too many cases, abandonment of the site altogether.
SO wants eyeballs (it's a business - more eyeballs = more advertising $), but is killing the golden goose with its current policies. Discouraging new users from posting trivial questions is strictly a good thing. In order to get answers, they will be forced to (heaven forbid) actually Google their question, and the regular users can focus more of their time on crafting higher quality questions and answers
The Caveat
The above is only a problem if the "old" identity of StackOverflow is the preferred one. Who do we wish to cater to? Is the staff and community willing to allow the site to become an interactive debugging service in addition to an authoritative question/answer library, or are the "find my bug" and "gimme teh codez" questions off topic? I suspect that there are considerable differences of opinion on this topic.
Related initiatives
Tim Post and Shog9 are working to increase the negative consquences of abusing the system. (See paragraph 5 and 6 here)
Give high-rep users extra weight on close votes
Many of these initiatives have merit, but they all focus on fixing a problem after it has occured: they would deal with bad questions after they have been posted. I wish to propose a solution that would ever-so-slightly raise the barrier to entry, to prevent many bad questions from ever being posted.
A Potential Solution: Introduce an very basic tag-based literacy test
I propose that we introduce a method of determining whether a question asker has a basic level of skill in the tag that they apply to their question. The community can propose and vote on simple tag-specific questions. In turn, that chosen question will be presented the first time a user attempts to attach the tag to a question. For example, if a user attempts to attach the PHP tag to a question, s/he will be presented with this task:
Correct the syntax error in this line of code:
echo (Enter your name');
or a multiple choice question:
Which line does not contain a syntax error?
A. echo (Enter your name');
B. echo ("Enter your name');
C. echo ('Enter your name');
Such questions will perform a simple function: distinguish between people who understand the fundamental elements of their own questions and perform basic debugging, and those who do not.
Initially, not all tags will have such questions. I propose that we allow people to use such tags without the check. When the established users in the tags wish to deal with the influx of problematic questions, they can come to Meta to propose and discuss the type of question that would be sufficient to act as a slight barrier to entry with the goal of improving the quality of questions in the tag.
This suggestion will not limit the ability of non-technical people to post question: they will simply have to settle for using tags that they understand. We can even consider establishing a list of canonical sources or question/answer pairs to present to users who fail the literacy test for a given tag in hopes that they will be able to educate themselves.
Implementation will not be trivial: It will require SE developers to implement the new functionality, and will require the input of Meta users to develop and refine the questions. The benefits will be manifold: individual tags will become more focused and useful when low-quality questions are automatically prevented. Site regulars will spend less time moderating and (potentially) more time focusing on the main mission: building a library of detailed answers to every question about programming. The site will become cleaner and more useful as users understand its true purpose.