Background
I've noticed a pattern recently in low-quality questions. A lot of them have this basic form:
I have an assignment: [copy and paste from assignment - summary: student is tasked with taking in some data structure, doing X with it, and then doing Y with the result.]
I figured out the following code to do X:
[properly formatted code example]
But now I'm stuck. How do I do Y?
And then the question will often have X-related tags, and not Y-related tags.
Superficially, this looks reasonably high quality. Of course, it is still definitely not actually high quality. I almost wrote this up as a fake "why was my question downvoted/closed/described as low quality when I put in all this effort?" question, so as to have a reference on meta to point people at. To be explicit:
The question masquerades as being about X when it is actually about Y.
Taken as a question about Y, it is once again purely a "give me the codez" request; "I am stuck" conveys no information, and Y itself is too broad.
(Of course, the real questions are often much worse: the asker will not show signs of recognizing distinct X and Y tasks, no matter how clearly the assignment is written; often the code will be pasted without proper formatting; often the assignment text is given as a screenshot; there might be spelling/grammar/punctuation problems; often there isn't an attempt to ask a question; etc. etc. etc.)
Musing
Why does this happen? Aside from blaming the usual suspects, I'd like to consider if the site can offer better guidance. The problem I'm identifying here is that the asker fails to extract the problem being encountered from the overall task , and thus cannot ask a meaningful question about that problem.
Dear reader, have you read How to Ask lately? Yes, you, the experienced meta.SO lurker who certainly does not require any such guidance. Are you aware of the actual guidance the site offers? I think it is woefully insufficient for the purpose. It's all well and good if you know what the problem is. That, of course, has a prerequisite that you can distinguish the concept of "the problem" (i.e., what is going wrong, or what functionality is missing) from "the task" (i.e. what the overall piece of code is supposed to do). I don't think that's the easiest thing in the world, especially for beginners. I think concrete examples would help there.
Attempt to make a question/discussion out of this
Have others noticed this pattern? Any other important patterns in low-quality questions that suggest missing guidance for askers? Any other ideas for communicating about how the site works? I found If Stack Overflow is about building a Q&A library - how to communicate and uphold that? while writing and I'm not very satisfied; my sense is that people should in principle be able to improve at question-asking, and the negative feedback of downvote/close/delete doesn't actually teach question-asking. It appears that there was a project to create a 'wizard' for new questions to guide the process, but a) I don't think such a thing could really help with the specific issue I show in the background section; b) it's been almost 4 years with no sign of rollout.