Answering the question "When did it happen?" is difficult. There is no single point in time or single event that this could be pinned down to.
At best, one could say that at one point in time, stack overflow officially turned from a "site for professional and enthusiast programmers" into a place where Developers Learn, Share & Build Their Career, but that may not be the problem.
As others have mentioned: There always have been bad questions, and there always have been homework questions (and I'd say that there's a considerable overlap between the two, although not necessarily). And there always have been complaints about that. The questions have already been linked to, e.g. Decline in question quality on SO? from 2010, or Why is Stack Overflow so negative of late? from 2014.
(And as an aside: I, personally, still feel like I'm "new to the game", having joined stack overflow only 5 years ago, long after these questions have been asked)
So there is no reasonable answer to the question of "when" it happened. It happened and is still happening, constantly. Further, more specific questions could therefore be:
What exactly have you been observing? More beginner questions? More questions that could clearly be identified as 'homework' questions? More questions that show a lack of basic understanding?
Are there factually more homework questions? These are hard to identify, unless someone blatantly copies+pastes the assignment.
Are there factually more bad questions?
Depending on the answers, one could probably argue that your perception might be distorted, because you have gained a proficiency and competence in your field that causes you to perceive questions as "trivial", in some way, even though you might have asked similar ones 10 years ago.
Even if homework questions could be clearly identified, one could still ask whether their number increased for a particular tag because certain universities picked up the respective language as their teaching language. Go and look for homework questions in cobol.
Regarding the last question, most veterans would say: Yes, certainly, there are more bad questions. And that may have a variety of reasons:
- As a matter of fact, when there are more users, then there are more bad questions
- Most of the "good" questions have already been asked (it is, so to speak, becoming harder to really as a good question)
- (There are many more possible reasons. A very important one is the one that NathanL mentioned, but I won't elaborate this further here...)
- There are no proper mechanisms or policies that keep the bad questions at bay
And I think that the last point is crucial. I hesitate to mention the word "welcoming" again. But to put it that way: When ten people (users=moderators!) are handling 1000 items of the review queues per day, then it might not matter when there are occasionally 1100 items in the queue. But if there are 2000 items, then the ten people (who are moderating the site, voluntarily, in their spare time, without being paid) might feel like herding cats, and simply give up. Again, not as a singular event in time. But when one of them drops out, it's becoming even more futile for the others, and therefore, this may still be a sudden, self-accelerating process that is much harder to be reversed than to be prevented in the first place.
However, I'd like to quote a recent comment by Jeff Atwood here:
If the solution to "beginners are not welcome" ends up being "experts are not welcome" then it is game over. I resisted it for years, too, but a separate, beginner focused stack overflow (with beginner oriented rules, and special beginner tooling) feels inevitable to me at this point if the site wants to survive.
Now, that's a surprisingly clear statement for me...