>>11940461>diversity classesIt must suck to be American. At least I hope you have a scholarship or grants so you didn't have to pay for this shit.
But seriously, weren't you doing anything like extracurriculars, slightly more advanced courses, having any contact with industry and researchers? Even talking to your seniors would help.
Ranting on how crappy your education is won't help you, though, so let me see if I can contribute with something. Just be aware that I'm writing this entirely from my perspective, and the stuff I'm going to say are not necessarily true depending on how your uni is going to work with these programmes, and how your local industry works.
Communications, control systems and digital signal processing, along with power and energy, are the best choices if you don't want to compulsorily get postgraduate education. Computer and digital, and electronics and solid state would only give you shit, and I mean SHIT job opportunities without at least a Master's degree. You'd find a saturated market, and would be stuck with an uninteresting job and that doesn't really pay that much. All the good opportunities would require you attending to postgraduate school. Microwaves and photonics, despite being a very interesting field, would be even more reliant of postgraduate education, as every single opportunity would require it.
I'm very biased towards control, since I've been working with it since trade school, but power and energy is slightly less demanding, and could possibly give you a steadier career. Still, I think the best thing to do is to seek for information in all the listed fields, and check what fits you the best. You could literally type "control systems" on YouTube and a large amount of playlists would be listed. One of EE's best aspects, in my opinion, is that it is a very, very well-documented engineering discipline. Watch the playlists of these fields, and pick the one that doesn't make you want to kill yourself.