Yes I am revisiting this, but please remember that I'm also asking about answers, not just questions.
There are a lot of frustrated users, including me, who want to write good questions, but just can't seem to get many positively received posts. Many people, mostly moderators, have said that the quality of SO questions and answers is going down. I agree, and I know that my own posts are included.
There may be a way to dramatically decrease the number of frustrated users who can't figure out why their posts are being received in a negative manner. The problem these people have is that they don't know exactly how to ask a good question, or post a good answer. For writing questions, the Help Center says to "Pretend you're talking to a busy colleague", to "Introduce the problem before you post any code", to "Help others reproduce the problem", etc. For writing answers, it says "Answer the question", "Provide context for links", and "Write to the best of your ability". Even with that, it is possible to goof, and the Help Center doesn't give any more detail than that.
My idea is that there must be a formula for writing a good post. I was once taught in school, that when writing a paragraph, I should answer these questions: Who? What? When? Where? Why? and How? This is a good formula for paragraphs and essays, and I have seen much evidence to support this, but I feel like that formula isn't exactly what should be used here.
I used that formula as an example to show exactly what I'm asking for: a method, or outline, of writing questions and answers that follow a specific, logical, thought process, a specific way to include research, problem background, screenshots if necessary, code, or what have you in the best way possible. By following a specific method, users can write quality posts, therefore driving the quality of the site up again, while leaving merciful room for those users who are trying to improve their conduct on Stack Overflow.
Duplicate:
How do beginners (like me) actually ask good questions and not get our accounts terminated? This is nice for questions, but it's lacking in anything about answers.
https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/327756/how-can-i-avoid-being-negatively-received-when-asking-questions Again, this post does not say anything about answers.
Related:
What is the recommended way to improve question writing without being downvoted into oblivion?
Edit: The answer below (by Pierre) is exactly the kind of method I'm looking for, except that I want answers included as well.