I think it's too much of a barrier.  How do you know you will be giving good examples of questions to rate vs. just confusing people?  There isn't unanimous consent all the time as is.  And as pointed out by @Raedwald, a critical reading of a question is complicated by the language used.

My [pre-flight questions](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/265671/pre-flight-screening-checklist-for-first-early-posts-adaptively-pick-three-item) proposal is three checkboxes, shuffled from a known list.  If the system knows what check boxes a user ticked, whether they went back and reviewed their question because of it, and what happened to the question after...you get metrics.

The key w/pre-flight is crowdsourcing of friendly tips and see which ones have an impact.  Quick, light, fun...from the site that brought you unicoins and winter hats.  This proposal sounds like it might just seem even more elitist.  Better to keep the focus on a good first experience--that's what gives people an incentive to invest more into learning and improvement.