And if your school makes their own AOS (such as power or identity), then I'd suggest you look at the rubric and reword one of the rubric sentences, to make it look like an essay question such as "identity is shaped through an individual's past experiences. Discuss this with reference to a prescribed and related text of your own choosing" (obviously I made this question up since I am not familiar with this area of study). Remember you need a related text
For Module A, essay questions are usually classified as "generic essay questions" such as "Text with similar content will inevitably reveal similar messages. Discuss this statement with reference to your two prescribed texts" or text based questions such as "A deeper understanding of disruption and identity emerges from considering the parallels between Frankenstein and Blade Runner. Compare how these texts explore disruption and identity"
For Module B, I assume your school will do othello or maybe a shakespearean text of some sort (since most schools do othello for Module B). For Othello essay questions, you can just transform Hamlet questions into Othello questions since they are essentially Mod B Shakespearean texts
And Module C, I believe some schools may or may not do it. However this module is all about representing and you will be required to find a related text. Haven't really studied this before so I can't really give the best advice