You're talking about two separate things here:
- Users that ask poor questions that get into a question ban
- Users who participate in the review queues
Getting a q-ban is a function of not changing behavior around the questions being asked, such as:
- Questions which are off-topic for the site (covered by the Help Center)
- Disregarding the warning signs that a user gets from the site itself (issued in advance of a user reaching a q-ban level; they may be rate limited first)
- Not engaging on Meta [in good faith] to try and establish what they aren't doing right - this one is forgivable in that people may not know that Meta isn't just a mean and scary place
Seeing how people ask questions on the site is...yes, well, that's one way to improve. But by the time one gets that far, it's often too late. You can consider yourself one of the very, very rare exceptions in that you are one of the very few people who are both impacted by and actually manage to escape q-bans.
This also directly interferes with the motivation of coming to a Q&A site as well - people want to ask questions, not learn about how to ask questions in just the right way to appease us. In the last ten years, their position and demeanor on how they approach questions hasn't changed, and I don't see that magically shifting with a new queue.
So I don't think this'd be a great idea; you're just giving people more work that gets in the way of them "just getting their question answered". It's better to just cut that off at the pass; the warnings that one gets is plenty, and the asker has to dig themselves out of that hole. It's not impossible - you did it, after all - but it's intentionally skewed to be hard because hand-holding people when it comes to question asking is not scalable.