Well, it's not just the kids. I am 19 years old and I joined SO about 6-8 months back and even I faced that massive down-voting problem. But then the down-voting was due to one of the following reasons.
- My questions were too primitive (sounded like I am trying to learn from the beginning).
- The question already existed on SO (similar)
- I usually ignored the questions which came up as suggestions (while framing a post). But eventually, I learnt that some of the answers in those posts had what I was looking for even though the question sounded different.
- My questions lacked codes. I was only posting to learn some theory.
and so on...
These are the problem most of the new SO users face and are usually not associated with kids alone.
If your brother's age satisfies the requirement, he may do the following to gain a good control over the working of the site and some confidence for sure.
- Join the site and surf the existing questions instead of making a new post. Well, according to me some of those really primitive (low quality) questions were asked and accepted on SO long back. Some of them even have 50+ up-votes. This really means that no question is stupid but the thing is that the question has been posted long back by someone else and today it is not appropriate to be asked based on the time we are in.
- If not directly on SO- Google Search. Nowadays Kids are familiar with Google and I have observed that any programming related search on Google shows links to SO post as the 1-3(maybe 4) results on the first page. So everyone can easily get to SO questions using something as simple as Google. You could teach your brother to Google.
- Books as simple as Head First Series. Try these. You may have to put in some effort by yourself. Who could understand a brother better than a brother?
Does this sound cool?
- There are some of us on SO who helps the OP by editing the post. I myself suggest grammatical edits when I find that other users are not able to understand the question. And I recently learn that it's not wrong to do so. Is suggesting an edit to correct grammar considered appropriate?
Comments:
- After earning a reputation close to 50, he could use the comment feature to comment his doubts on related posts (believe me, he will be familiar with SO by the time he reaches reputation 50).
Have you tried this as an option to SO (certainly not as amazing as SO though)?
And some of these articles?
- http://lifehacker.com/how-and-why-to-teach-your-kids-to-code-510588878
- http://www.edudemic.com/the-three-best-free-coding-websites-for-kids/
Finally, he needs to be emotionally strong(to handle SO at least) to take up something like programming. He may be more disheartened at a failing program rather than down-votes on SO. Programming isn't as easy as managing your questions on SO.
A programmer needs to take time and try to get his doubts cleared through some book or existing contents and videos on the site. Believe me, most of the things we want are already present on the Internet.