There are several layers that could be unpacked here, and it's hard to address each of them in all detail.
At the first glance, this sounds like a good idea to solve some of the homebrewn problems: New users coming to the site with wrong expectations is a problem. Roughly speaking: Someone has 99 programming problems, and 98 of them can be solved with Google, Stack Overflow, Copy+Paste and Trial+Error. The last one is taken down and passed around, as a new ""question"", saying: "Hey, solve this one for me as well".
But I think that you underestimate the efforts that people are willing to invest in order to ... reduce the effort that they have to invest. What you are suggesting sounds a bit like a CAPTCHVA: A "Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Contributors and HelpVampires Apart". But people will just jump through these hoops. They will click some multiple-choice-checkboxes and fill out text fields. In doubt, there will be sites that tell them which checkboxes they have to click and which text they have to enter in order to pass the test!
And then they will ask their low-quality questions.
It might be a hurdle that could prevent some people from asking homework questions "too easily" - meaning that there might be a bit fewer of these questions. But without strict curation, it will still not be possible to cope with the incoming stream of low-quality content.
Of course, "curation" here means what can then be portayed as hostility, non-welcomingness, punishment, toxicity, or honesty. This leads to another layer, which is, once more, the political one: If this approach is likely to reduce the number of active users or site interactions, or prevents some people (in obscure and arbitrary ways) from participating, then it's not gonna happen - even when you give it a nice, shiny, wholesome name like "The Welcoming™ Tutorial". Or to put it that way: When the goals that could (optimistically) be achieved with this approach are not in line with the goals of the company, then there's no reason to put effort into this.
And an aside: I think that such a tutorial should simply not be necessary. I mean, Stack Overflow has accumulated thousands of mavens for many years, and achieved its original goals with not much more than saying: "Be nice", and establishing an unprecedented system for the moderation and curation of high-quality question and answers. Of course, not everything was perfect, and there have been some problems (none of which have been related to politics and demographics, by the way), but it worked astonishingly well.
watched_intro
(for new users it's set to false) and if it's false, then they are forced to watch an ad (which is a stackoverflow intro video), and use the technology that advertisers use where you cannot skip it, adblockers don't work (more specifically,watched_intro
isn't set to true if adblockers are blocking the video), and the user must watch the video to the end beforewatched_into
is set to true.watched_video
tag - just go to YouTube until the SO video finished playing). I'm sure this has been suggested before, but I maybe new questions (and maybe even answers!) by newbies should not publicly appear on the site at all - they could be put into a queue, and they might even be deleted automatically after a few days, unless they are approved by, let's say, 3 silver tag badge owners. That could help. (Corollary: It won't happen either... :-( )