Speaking as a user that joined while I was in my last semester of college, I can say that Stack Overflow has already done quite a lot to accommodate students. However, there's quite a lot that Stack Overflow shouldn't do to accommodate students, too.
First, the question quality of students or beginners in programming leaves much to be desired. The average student that made use of Stack Overflow while I was in college believed that they could just post their assignment and have someone complete it for them. There's no forgiveness or leniency as far as I'm concerned for someone that decides, "I'm going to dump this homework assignment here; someone may help me out later."
Next, there are the "help me I'm stuck" style of problems. I don't doubt that we've all been stuck on something we're working on, but there is very little that Stack Overflow can do to help a student truly get unstuck. Consider that now I'm in my third year of professional development, and I have ways of solving particular problems. I know that my solutions wouldn't necessarily translate well to a rookie looking to get a hint on how to simply overcome their problem. Even if they did, though, how much value does one get from a question that states, "I don't know how this works, I got this far but I'm stuck, could you help?"- especially when that is code that would never make its way into production?
I think that we're doing alright as it is. We've definitely become stricter about our question quality, so we don't have to worry as much about the two above scenarios. In essence, so long as a student is able to ask a question that can survive on Stack Overflow, we've done pretty much all we need to.