When looking through the Android tag, I see a lot of questions where there is an issue explained and often "please help" or something similar is written there. No stacktrace, no code, just "here is an issue, please fix".
There are warnings that tell the new user about these things, but they seem to ignore them, meaning there are a ton of questions that get downvotes because they (most of the time) just have some code and an explanation of the issue (it crashes when I do [blank]). And this type of question leads to meta questions asking if it is OK to downvote their first question/answer.
But the reality is that there are so many new users who write bad questions, and I believe it may be because they aren't introduced into the standard. They get a problem and if they are new to development, they panic and go to Stack Overflow, showing little to no code and saying "help me".
In a few hours I can flag about 2-3 questions asking about suggestions to libraries, IDE's "is this [tool] better than this one? What are good alternatives?". Most of the new users' questions (at least in the Android tag) are poor quality and often receive a lot of downvotes. Most of the new users' questions I have seen on the Android tag have been off-topic, poorly researched, or in the Android Documentation (the official one, not the one here on Stack Overflow).
So could it be an idea to prevent the first questions from being viewed by anyone else, but only to those in the review queue, to ensure that these questions and these users get a start that doesn't involve downvoting and closing/deleting their questions/answers? And in general prevent low quality, duplicated, and poorly researched questions from being visible on Stack Overflow.
It will be a sort-of staging area for new posts by new users. Any new users who haven't posted a question/answer yet should have their post enter the staging area, so that it isn't visible until it is approved. This will force new users to learn how you ask a question here on Stack Overflow, and what the standard is. In doing this, those who will not edit their questions can get a warning or something similar, but not be allowed to have their question published.
This is, however, a raw idea. It does need refining, But the basic idea is to make sure every new user who asks or answers a question knows how to do it. I have seen people adding comments as answers because they think it is a forum (like Reddit), and these types of thing are what the staging area will work to avoid. It will be like another review queue, but there should be communication between the post's creator and the reviewers.
As mentioned in one answer, it would also decrease the close vote queue, and also better categorize the questions: Are these bad because the user doesn't know better, or because the user didn't care or forgot to do research?
'help new users write as good questions' a waste of time that could be spend on answering those few questions that show some effort and respect for other SO users.
- So instead you suggest we answer those terrible questions that show up and get closed? This queue would be for the first post of each type(question and answer) and the first time, the users would get a free pass to screw up. If they do the same on their next post(s) after getting suggestions on how they can edit their posts to become better, then there is no need to try. IF they cannot understand the rules after having it(1/2)