We're looking into making this sort of help available through a more 'just in time' mechanism in the future, but a lot of things need to settle down closer to being finally feature-complete (e.g. Review & Channels) before we can focus on it without digging into more technical debt.
An important thing to remember is that it takes a certain kind of user to actually want to use the features that they unlock; some people have six-figure rep yet seldom vote, much less review or cast close votes. We need to respect that as long as we're sure we didn't miss the opportunity to tempt them.
What's needed are three things, really:
Do a better job marketing the idea of community self-moderation, and the value proposition for individuals to actually want the additional responsibility. Badges are a nice non-intrusive way for folks to discover their new abilities, but we need more (non-intrusive) ways to tempt folks to use the tools that they unlock.
Give better just in time guidance to folks that start exploring the tools. We do a sort-of-okay-ish job of that now with brief introductory bits of text and help, but we don't do enough of it in a consistent enough manner that folks train on immediately spotting and finding value in learning opportunities. It has to be at least marginally more compelling than people's natural tendency to just dismiss anything that has an X in the upper right corner.
We have to make the tools suck less. Way less. This is happening now as we start untangling all kinds of technical debt in order to make Channels possible and figure out what sorts of moderation tools they're going to need, but the undertaking is enormous. This has the effect of pulling at separate ends of a twisted rope unraveling it gradually from one side to the other, but it's going to take quite a bit more work. No snazzy just-in-time help is going to seem effective if it's there mostly to work around wonky UX and strange use cases. I actually worry that we lose folks that want to do more just because the tools are too rough around the edges.
Stack Overflow as you see it today is almost a living chronological record of hundreds of small problems that we solved independently of one another after the initial launch that was thought to be nearly feature complete in 2008 (laughs and hilarity ensue). So before we can build truly admirable help into the system, we have to go back and add the polish that makes it seem like all of those features were thought of on the first day, and just lightly polished over time.
So if you look at any of the moderation tools in isolation, well, they're pretty darn neat; flagging and reviewing has made SO (and by extension Stack Exchange) one of the safest places on the Internet to ask questions. If you look at all of them together .. it looks like a bit of a disjointed mess that many people designed, which is .. well .. exactly what happened :)
As we keep pulling at ends and unraveling messes we're going to get better tools, which hopefully won't require as much explanation, and the system will do a good job of letting users know that they didn't necessarily do anything wrong, they just found themselves at odds with what other users thought (a very common reason for people to feel jarred).
I'm more than pretty confident that the messes we unravel thanks to Channels will finally make fixing the tools and finally providing decent help for our most engaged users much easier (starting with diamond mods, then reviewers, etc), but we really need to get there and strike that sense of UX consistency before we can build a more comprehensive system to make everything more self-guiding (which always makes me think of this from the original Total Recall):

.. but yeah, we definitely know we need it, which I probably could have said a bit more clearly in the first paragraph.