^ What markers abhor is teen angst, and the senior marker (Peter) told me that at least 70% of the material is just that. He also indicated that regardless of your level of writing, writing in this area cannot earn you more than a C to C+ score at most.
I have quite a lot of tips, but I just don't have the time to explain them all on bored of study due to time constraint - sorry
But the main tip I offer students is pick a subject you're interested in, such as music, ancient or modern history, international studies, languages etc. and use the skills you've gained from those subjects and impose them on you're creative writing, as it will improve characterization to an immense level.
For example, if you're a student of Modern History, and use the authentic definitions/details you've learned in the subject, your character/creative piece will stand out. I mean, would you prefer reading another sob story about a kid who gets into a spat with his/her parents, or about a soldier in WWI who's feeling as though he'd been conned into joining a pointless, gruesome war?
Being in a pile of thousands of creative pieces, you want your piece to be a stunner. A tale about an orphan is quite predictable -> he feels as though he does
not belong, and then through some ordeal, he changes and feel he
does belong...
This disqualifies it from the scoring the top bands (according to the definition). The most important part of creative writing are multiple, complex and sophisticated (words straight from the rubric) themes and levels of belonging.
If you're interested, I'm hosting a Creative Writing course at Parramatta City Library during March. I'll post details in another thread some time later (I'll provide a link if you're interested).
Good luck