**TL;DR: The low quality of questions has been [linked](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/252756/are-high-reputation-users-answering-fewer-questions/252757#252757) to decreased activity of users who have > 25k reputation. Improving question quality would benefit both ends. What would be the best ways to achieve it?**

 Improving the quality of Stack Overflow questions has been discussed
 before. One suggested solution is addition of
 [tag-tips](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/274632/help-the-helpless-with-how-to-ask-tag-tips). 

> *The nice thing about this is that it will allow the community to*
> *create standards (or a "tag-tip" wiki) for what each tag should say. -Kermit*

 In addition to that, Stack Overflow is currently launching series of [tests](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/319980/explaining-stack-overflow-experimenting-with-about-pages?lq=1) to 

> *educate new community members about Q&A.*


**Problem**

 - Asking good and clear question with reproducible example is not easy for first time user
 - Even though there are [generally](http://sscce.org/) good [guidelines](http://stackoverflow.com/help/mcve). new Stack Overflow users don't find them either don't know how to apply them in specific area (tag).
 - To address this problem, under javascript tag info there are specific [guidelines](http://stackoverflow.com/tags/javascript/info) to ask javascript related questions. 



###Possible solutions
 - My idea: Community supported tag specific sample question which would show up for new users.
 - Sample question would show up related to first tag and user could modify it or delete it. 
 - [Tag-tips](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/274632/help-the-helpless-with-how-to-ask-tag-tips): More guided help to first time user. 
 - Efficient way of using voting and comments.

Downvoting is actually quite effective method to force people to rethink their question and make it better. But it still requires manual work and active education of new users by asking same questions over and over again. Is there any other more efficient ways to improve quality?