I see many discussions, on Meta and offsite, where new users rebuke the mod feedback that occurs in modded questions (unclear, low quality, dupe, etc).
The modding is completely appropriate, but it also create a community that more closed-off to newbies. I think that threshold begets quality, but this is a proposal for how we can do better.
New users adjusting to question-asking style, I propose, has become its own scale of advancement that is worthy of reputation points.
What is this rubbish? Newbie users have little rep already, and in language tags with high answer saturation, there is low likelihood of asking a meaningful new question (or answer). But the improvements they make in asking questions is, itself, real advancement in this community. When they're mod-flagged, and then make good changes, the flags can/should come off.
Rep for learning commonly-failed conventions
Giving rep points for these changes would gamify their process of learning proper Q&A style. It would keep them learning by rewarding good behavior. If you consider it now, most newbies that face the mod-flag challenges have a huge cliff to climb, and no reward is given to them, other than 1 or 2 people finally answering their clarified question. Rarely does their question get many votes (since it's such a newbie question), which translates into few rep points in exchange for all their effort.
Limits
These rep points would only be available to new and low-rep users, and there would be a natural limit on them as the user exceeded the threshold points that defined them as "low rep." Perhaps a 50 point rep limit before these rewards are not available.
Knowledge is its own reward, but a more gradated rewards curve is suitable for the meta-learning process of being a new user asking flag-worth questions.