TLDR;
I am suggesting that providing a mechanism whereby people choose to be mentored (in order to learn how to ask good questions) will contribute to make SO a more welcoming place, without sacrificing quality.
We've all had a good fight about the (in)famous blog post. This is my effort to calm down and actually try and be constructive.
My experience here on SO, and now elsewhere, has brought me to the point where I am convinced that experts and newbies can't operate as equals in a shared space. Basically because experts will get burnt out on always hand-holding, and newbies will end up getting their feelings hurt by burnt-out experts.
The weird thing is that https://english.stackexchange.com/ worked this out ages ago, and https://ell.stackexchange.com/ was born.
I think that you can propose workarounds until you're blue in the face, this is the underlying problem, and it's not going to go away.
You have to have a place where experienced programmers can concentrate on asking/answering questions without changing nappies. And a different place where they can engage in mentoring.
Because I think there are tons of experts who would engage in mentoring (I mean, they're here because they like to help). But the question-answer-I-need-a-fix-to-my-code-right-now-quickly format doesn't motivate the experts because it doesn't really help the newbie. It's giving a fish, rather than teaching to fish.
Given this analysis, what should we do? A separate site, like ELL? Or a 'baby pool' within Stack Overflow? Whatever it is, I think it is necessary to have a place where the roles are clearly differentiated: the newbie is here to learn, and knows it. The expert is here to help, kindly, and knows it. Given that SO is apparently so scary, maybe it would even be welcomed by new users. In Clippy style: "you're new here, would you like help asking your first questions so you don't get shot down in flames?".
Maybe the simplest idea to experiment with would be instead of having a "asking wizard", have an "asking tutor". People would voluntarily enter their first questions into a "pimp my question" queue, where experts could help them out and explain the ropes.
Update: This isn't really so much about technical newbies, as "people who don't know how to formulate a question". Obviously there's a correlation, but in response to Benjamin's comment below, if you've learnt how to ask a decent question in Javascript, there's no reason you won't know how to do it for Swift.
Update2: What do you do with users who refuse to be mentored? Is there any conceivable way in which they can be 'welcome'? Re liliscent's question, are there users who are just too newbie to be salvageable without further tutoring in a non-Q&A environment?