After watching this scenario play out multiple times, User asks question, waits until he gets the answer he wants, and then for whatever reason, (i.e. to prevent classmates from getting answer, prevent teacher from discovering the assistance, etc..) deletes the question moments after having copied and pasted a local copy on his machine. For all the reasons given, this wastes the efforts of those good enough to try and help, and denies all future questioners the benefit of the answer.
To prevent this gaming of SO and robbing all other/future users the benefit of the answer, I would propose that a user not be able to delete their post (in addition to the current limit imposed by upvote of an answer, etc..) if the question itself has not received downvotes.
While there is no reason to force a questioner to maintain a question that is getting hammered by downvotes, preventing a question from being deleted where there are no downvotes insures that valid questions/answers are not being lost for dubious reasons. It will also quickly dissuade posting by those who intend to delete and conceal the help they get here if they know there is a real possibility they cannot delete what they post.
As part of this scheme close and other actions should not count as downvotes on the question, thereby allowing deletion. Only a downvote of the question itself should enable the ability to delete for the questioner. (Lord knows that is a small hurdle for bad questions to get over here)
The basic scheme should be something along the lines of:
del disabled if (Quest Value >=0 || any Ans Value > 0 || any current checks)
This would preserve the useful questions, and the hard work of those providing answers, from being deleted by someone looking to game the system for personal gain. It would also serve as a bit of justice in the event the questioner was misusing SO intending to delete so his assistance could not be found out.
While this (get answer and delete) has been very noticeable this past week or so, I guess it goes along with the end of the semester. SO does a pretty darn good job in all areas, but this is one where a tweak is needed.