My usual advice on interviews is for you to take some things along from some projects you've worked on in the past. If you've built hobby electronics projects, take them and the documentation along. If you've done previous internship or lab work, take the documentation along.
I prefer to talk about things that a candidate has actual experience in during an interview, rather than ask boilerplate EE questions. The reason is, if it really is something they've worked on, then I can expect them to understand it in detail, so I can ask as detailed questions as I want. If you show me a schematic of a radio or uC circuit that you've built, we are going to get into a lot of details about how things work and why they work that way.
Not all interviewers will necessarily want to talk about your previous project work, but many/most will at least let you tell them briefly about them. And it will make you stand out among the other candidtates -- you will be the practical one with some useful, proven skills that the project engineer can take advantage of.
Have fun!