It depends on the things that you work with. If you're into java, then you really only need to keep an eye on the feed of recently active questions - it tends to be an 'omelette' when it comes to complexity and difficulty.
If you're into c, then you'd probably want to keep an eye on questions about pointers, and possibly memory-management, which sometimes mention valgrind or gdb.
If php is your thing, then you'll generally find folks struggling with queries in mysqli, and folks with framework-specific questions in those various tags. New programmers often need help debugging.
For every tag view, there's a link to a feed at the bottom of the page. It takes a little while and some tweaking, but you can generally find questions that are likely to be at a certain level of difficulty by refining tag searches. It's also easy to see stuff tagged a certain way that is also unanswered.
Just be careful to watch for duplicates. Look at the "Related" list of questions in the sidebar when viewing a question, could this have been asked before in a slightly different way? Once you get 50 rep, you can flag these to suggest closing them as duplicates.
As you go through questions, don't be shy about suggesting edits that could improve them. Titles are pretty critical for a question to get the attention it needs, as you'll see when you start browsing feeds to look for things to answer. If you see something like "Issue in Java", edit that to actually summarize the question. You get 2 rep for each edit you suggest, up to 1k total rep through editing. It's a great way to unlock some creature comforts while you look for the best way to dive in.