Seriously, I'm tired of having to write this comment for every single question from a new user.
Maybe force disable the "ask question" button until the user has scrolled down the page, like some "License Agreement" screens for some apps do?
Seriously, I'm tired of having to write this comment for every single question from a new user.
Maybe force disable the "ask question" button until the user has scrolled down the page, like some "License Agreement" screens for some apps do?
There is really no way to force someone to read a page without actually being there sitting beside them. In your proposed solution, they can just scroll down and be done with it. If they really don't care, they will always find a way out of it.
Putting that aside, even after reading it, they will probably just ignore it and do what they want. If someone is in a big hurry, their first thought is probably not "Wow, I should seriously research this question instead of having someone experienced do it for me."
It is already beside the Ask Question page so that users who actually want to improve their questions can learn how.
The exact thing you describe has existed for years. Create a new account, and try to ask a question...
It seems to me that a possible solution would be, for users with low ratings, to add text to the top of the page where they ask a question, that lists the basic requirements of a good question, and perhaps also a pop-up dialog that reminds them to read that information.
If a user isn't prepared to spend a few minutes asking a question properly - do we want them here wasting out time flagging questions that are off-topic or too broad that are driving us to start posting non-constructive and sarcastic comments (which incidentally don't help new users' opinion of the site)?