As a user who is mainly active in answering questions, I see a lot of new users (let's say 500 reputation or less) that are looking for questions that seem easy to answer. Then, they unleash many similar answers and try to be the first to get the accepted answer. Among these questions, some are very poorly asked and get downvoted quickly.
Still, a lot of misguided answers are given anyway in efforts to raise reputation. At the end of the day, the poorly asked questions are getting more attention than they deserve and the result is bad answers. Also, the time put into writing those answers probably won't pay back, since none of them have a decent chance of being accepted if the question is poorly written in the first place.
I think that a way to discourage poorly written questions (and subsequent poorly written answers) would be to prevent new users under some thresholds to post an answer to a poor question. For an example, let it be 500- reputation and a question below -5.
Users that are more familiar with Stack Overflow will more likely wait for the question to improve before answering, enforcing the question to get improved in order to get answers. Failing to improve the question will probably mean no answers and closing. Eventually, that could convince new users that if they don't put time in asking questions, people won't put time into answering them.
What do you guys think?
Update:
As pointed out by some, the problem isn't related to new users only. There are also high reputation users that are abusing the reputation system by answering poor questions that seem easy for them. For that matter, as suggested by @MarounMaroun, a solution to that problem, if it exists, would also need to consider high reputation users.
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operator does. Obviously a dupe, no research effort at all, the question's currently closed and at -6. Still, it has three answers, all of them by 8k+ / 15k+ users. Just a confirmation of @MarounMaroun's comment. (I'm not going to link the question and throw the users under the bus)