The FAQ Index on meta lists several questions that might be linked to from relevant questions. One of these is "How do I ask and answer homework questions?"
New programmers often get their start in programming on homework problems, and questions about those homework problems often lead to the same programmers getting their start here on Stack Overflow. Often, homework problems get a comment or other link to that element of the FAQ. For many new users, this might be their first exposure to Meta.
Because a new user's first question is often of lower quality, more experienced users who attempt to answer those questions often get downvoted (whether that's appropriate or not) and rudely treated for doing so (new users are also often unware of the code of conduct) so there's a general disincentive for answering such questions. Occasional positive experiences for helping new users might lead to new users getting more help and being more likely to stick around and become positive contributing members of the community.
On that FAQ question's accepted community-wiki answer, I made a good-faith edit adding a point about responding to helpful answers, primarily about how to mark an answer as accepted, which is something I think we're trying to encourage here. This also helps later users who come along with a similar question.
Another user removed both that edit and a point that had been standing for years, from the original answer, and wasn't part of my change at all, which had previously been removed and promptly restored. The explanation in comments focused on that user's view that nothing in that FAQ answer should repeat content that could be found elsewhere on Meta nor make points that weren't strict requirements. The user who wrote the original answer promptly moved to re-include both points.
In response to the critic's point about requirements, I then edited to add a point where formal requirements do exist. This was again rolled back by the same user and again restored by the user who'd written the original answer. Further discussion in the comments, unfortunately now all gone, again focused on whether or not the FAQ question answer could contain information that can be found elsewhere on meta.
A later reset restoring those edits as well as that point from the original version which had stood for years but been removed a third time without discussion was greeted with a hard message about not creating new rules and having to start a separate discussion first, ignoring the fact that I'd been resetting to what had been standing for years. The rollback also ignored that comments had been forcefully making the opposite point about how the community wiki FAQ answer should NOT contain points from elsewhere on meta; inclusion elsewhere was grounds for removing them from that FAQ answer.
Personally, I maintain my view from the comments on that answer that the FAQ answer should summarize the points from meta and Help Center that are most relevant to the subset of questions that FAQ concerns. However, others clearly disagree. Depending on who's chastising me for getting it wrong at any given moment, the answer should contain ONLY content from elsewhere on meta or NO content from elsewhere on meta.
This meta question is intended to open discussion on that topic more specifically. Should Meta FAQ answers serve to summarize content or introduce new users, or be specifically focused to exclude content that can be found elsewhere on meta?
Going further, as my critics did, does there need to be an exclusive focus of content ONLY found elsewhere on meta, such that rule-changing removal from a community wiki cannot be restored without a new discussion on the topic, and the long-standing FAQ answer cannot itself serve as a source?