I seriously disagree that more efforts should be taken onto that.
It's common to refer new posters to the "How to Ask" page ...
Yes, that's one of the very first entry points they are referred to, even without interference of comments.
I think it's quite prominent already:

New users signing up the site, who really care to read and understand The Tour will even be awarded the informed badge
If they go back to edit their question, I think it shows "How to Edit" instead.
New OPs often need to be nudged about that referring to the [**edit**]
button in the comment markup. So let it be so ...
Could be standing out fat style though as shown above, and maybe an additional tooltip appearing to say:
Consider to [edit] your question for clarification, instead of responding with another comment.
when they are going to the comment (reply) edit box instead.
The primary question is IMO:
How should we improve to communicate with people who don't bother to read at a purely text oriented site?
Kind of a rhetorical question though, needs some solid (nice!!) sarcasm to handle that sanely.
@deceze♦ "How about a 10-second animated GIF involving emojis and kittens for the millennial crowd…? 🤪🦄🍻"
No, I don't believe that
- adding emojis like

- or seemingly cute animated kitten gifs

would really help to solve that problem.
My personal conclusion:
feature-request:
Don't allow newly accounted users (minimum membership 1h or so, better a day or two) to ask a question unless they earned the Informed● badge.
As a workaround for that FR isn't yet realized, just flag/vote those useless questions,- coming up because lack of attention -, for closure, and maybe give them a downvote along.
[ask]
. And before you know you will improve your knowledge on How to ask simply by reviewing, Applying the Ask notice to real case scenario