There has been a lot of talk recently about how we treat new users, prompted by a certain blog post. A lot of this discussion has centered around a false dichotomy of experienced users who care about quality and new users who clutter up Stack Overflow with dupes and bad questions. Ideally, older users don't only care about the quality of answers on the site, and newer users don't only care about getting the answer to their question; they both care about learning and helping each other.
I came across the meta post Should I be discouraged by Stack Overflow? earlier, and the answers are all overwhelmingly positive and welcoming. They stress that Stack Exchange is a community for learning, and that you're not going to be a pro when you first start out. But many of them also talk about feeling discouraged when they first started on the site as well. How do we combat this?
Honestly, our current system of upvotes and downvotes and closevotes and dupehammers doesn't seem like one that stresses the fact that all of us (with the possible exception of Jon Skeet) are learning and helping one another learn; nor does the site language that constantly stresses that this is a place for 'professionals' and 'experts' (as though professionals and experts in a field don't get that way by constantly learning).
So many people learn programming on their own without any kind of formal training, and honestly, that's fantastic. I believe Stack Overflow could be a great tool to supplement this kind of learning, no matter what level you happen to be at, but it's not there yet. How do we get there?