Update: As of October 2016, this has been changed, such that flagging a question as "should be closed" now requires only 15 reputation (not the 50 reputation explained below).
This is now a significantly lower bar, and I feel even more confident about the claim that you probably should hold off on judging what is/is not "low quality" until you've contributed at least one or two positively-scored posts of your own.
There is, unfortunately, not a good way for low-reputation users to indicate problematic questions. Although you can flag at only 15 reputation, flagging a question as "should be closed" actually requires 50 reputation because of the implementation detail that 50 reputation is required to post comments, and these flag choices implicitly leave a comment on your behalf.
So the natural instinct of a quality-minded, yet low-reputation, user is to raise a custom moderator flag. This is certainly not a bad instinct, but there is very little that a moderator can do in response to your flag. They cannot flag a question on your behalf; all they can do is single-handedly close the question, which is not necessarily appropriate. Moderators also operate under the guidance that they should not step in to do things that the community can do without their assistance. Closing a question can be done by five regular users with 3k+ reputation, requiring no moderator intervention, so this is the preferred route.
Compounding matters further, the moderator who processes your custom flag is not likely to notice or consider how your current reputation limits the privileges you have access to. They're just going to decline your flag using one of the canned decline reasons, which sends a decidedly unhelpful and potentially confusing message to you, since it recommends that you should instead be doing something that is impossible for you to do.
Someone brought a similar issue up on Meta yesterday (10k+ only link), albeit in an extremely unconstructive fashion, which kind of got me thinking about this situation. I started asking myself if there's really a good reason why flagging a question as in need of closure should really require 50 reputation, whereas you can flag something as spam, abusive, or very-low-quality with only 15 reputation. I'm not sure there is. As I mentioned above, it looks like an implementation detail leaking into the abstraction.
Perhaps the best argument for the status quo is that a user with less than 50 reputation is rather unlikely to be well-acquainted with how the site works and what is/is not on-topic, making their flags more noisy than helpful. That may not be true in all cases, but it is probably more often true than not.
Honestly, the basic assumption made throughout the system is that 50 reputation is a very low bar. You really need to get to the 50-point threshold in order to fully participate on Stack Overflow. Posting a few good answers will net you +10 reputation for each upvote, getting you to 50 reputation in short order. The best I can say is that we'd prefer your initial interactions on the site be posting questions and answers, rather than engaging in moderation duties.
While people with a good sense of quality will be bothered by the inability to act when duty calls, rest assured that we do have plenty of users raising flags already. What we really need are users with the ability to act on those flags. That requires, at a minimum, the privilege to downvote questions and answers, and even better, the privilege to cast close votes. We anxiously await your earning of moderation privileges, and sincerely appreciate your desire to help maintain the site's quality!