> feel welcome > are educated > without negative feedback That's a bit too much to ask, isn't it? Stack Overflow doesn't really deal in helping with the baby steps involved with learning to program. If someone doesn't know English, nor the jargon specific to programming and even less so to their particular area of interest, they don't know what they want nor need to ask and thus are going to ask unclear/too broad questions. There's only so many ways you can explain that without sounding "negative". Downvoting and close-voting is a not-so-subtle way to tell a user _"Your question in its current form isn't really what we're looking for"_. That's not negative, although it could be perceived as such. If someone's looking for one-on-one guidance and someone who will patiently explain from the ground up what they're doing wrong, they need a mentor, not Stack Overflow.