This is an area where I'm more interested in the spirit than the letter of the rules.
About homework and the SG
Why do we care about plagiarism? I can think of two reasons (or perhaps two categories of reasons, depending on how one counts):
The site could get in trouble for violating someone else's copyright, DMCA rights etc.
Someone could gain (actual reputation points, notoriety, praise from the OP...) for someone else's work while that other person goes unrecognized.
The first is generally dealt with by editing (although not everyone will be able to make the edit).
The second doesn't seem like it would apply in SG. We're only talking about questions, and people don't go to Q&A sites to get famous for asking questions (even if I like the sound of a world where that was feasible).
From the comments, it sounds like generally what gets plagiarized is assignment text. It's not clear to me exactly what might need to be cited, or how. Especially if the assignment text was sent to students directly or is only available on a login-protected courseware site (or, heaven forbid such luddites still exist: physically printed and distributed, and retyped by the student). Are we expecting something like: "I have an assignment which asks: {block quote of assignment text} [{surname of OP's instructor}, {year}. {Title of assignment}.]"?
But more importantly: almost certainly, such text is entirely superfluous for the question that's actually being asked. We already have general standards for focus and clarity, and we have specific guidelines for posting homework questions, that would mean a copy and paste of the assignment text has no place in the question. Students are expected to phrase the problem in their own words, and to be able to distinguish "fluff" (e.g., introducing a fictional character who wants the problem solved, or describing a physical situation being modeled by the input data) from the actual problem.
As such: such content needs to be edited out anyway, but it certainly will be before making it into a main space question (if that ever happens), and there is no potential for illicit gain in it.
As such, I can see no reason why moderators need to get involved.
About vandalism and "gibberish", vis-a-vis plagiarism
I agree that flags should be used when someone posts complete gibberish in an SG question - i.e., text that doesn't appear like it's even intended to convey a question about programming, even in a foreign language.
But I don't think plagiarised content in a question is analogous to that. When someone posts gibberish, the intent is to abuse the site. But when someone copies and pastes from homework, the intent is to abuse the assignment. I have to assume good faith when it comes to interacting with the site. People could easily legitimately believe (wrongly, of course) that the site is there to "help" them with homework; people like this want their assignment completed, and are simply not thinking in terms of whether their actions make Stack Overflow a worse place. Whereas it's impossible to post gibberish deliberately without the understanding that it's disruptive and unwanted.
Someone who walks into an auto shop demanding driving lessons may or may not be confused, and may or may not be trespassing. But such an individual is not a vandal.