You need to know all your texts inside out to be able to adapt your essay to the question. For practice, you write an essay, get i checked and repeat until it is perfect and can be moulded to different questions. One way of doing this is having a 2k word essay with stand alone paragraphs which you can drop or keep based on the question (which is what I did)
but i have nfi how to do creatives properly. just make sure its not cliched.
This, just know the points you want to make really well.
^ Those especially
1) Know texts really well
2) Have a strong thesis
Creatives
Take anything cliched/your own experiences and change it, so that the world you create is not your own.
eg you felt isolated in high school. Don't make the protagonist a teenage human. Maybe you could try to write in second/third person, or make it non-linear, or perhaps have your protagonist be a middle aged, balding woman.
You could translate the feeling of isolation into why a loner is resigned to such a fate etc etc. And maybe why being a part of the minority isn't so bad at all (if you reason that it's because it makes you unique/different/awesome because you can 'go against the crowd' the markers will burn your creative and your house down for being so epically shit).
NB: writing a creative doesn't mean whining about isolation/belonging being painful/scary
have you seen the english advanced silly bus?
it goes on about absolutely nothing. you;d have to really read between the lines to fish something out
It's written in plain English what they want you to write in the module.
eg module b is about your perception of your prescribed text, module a is about how the same shit seems different because of time, and module c is about how different views change how something is seen