I'm in a similar boat: I'm a student with four years experience in various areas of computing, and I feel that I am in no way an expert. I mostly stick to the Python tag, sometimes branching out into JavaScript, because these are the areas I feel most comfortable in.
I will think about answering a question whenever I can. Sometimes it leads to me starting to type something out and then getting rid of it all, because maybe I didn't understand the problem as thoroughly as I thought or someone else has got an answer in just before me. Other times I'll come up with an answer that I think is very simple and straightforward, and someone will swipe the tick with a single-line solution1. That's going to happen all the time: be gracious and accept that yes, there are going to be people better than you, but you can still contribute to the discussion and help someone.
From my experience on SO, I quite commonly scroll down past the accepted and top voted answers just to see what else is available to me, and will quite often learn something - and whenever I do, I leave an upvote; I recommend you do the same! It encourages people like us who may feel like they're not making a difference to keep trying and work harder at giving quality answers.
I don't have a lot of accepted answers or rep but I'm getting there. And the best way to do better is to keep contributing, keep learning and keep my chin up. I hope that you do the same. :)
- To be honest, when dealing with beginners I think it can often more useful to give a longer, more clear piece of code than a single-line solution with a more complicated concept involved. But at the end of the day the OP is going to pick which ever one helped them the most, so it's up to them.