I started and completed my civil engineering course at this same institution, and the experience generally was average. The theoretical part of the lesson was good I can say but the practicals were below average, just to add lectures were fully in a class of many people like 50+ students and the lecturers didn’t have time to make sure that all people are with him or her this made many students not to be fully into the course. That’s why after graduation you will find a graduate who can’t interpret anything on-site and is not in a position to assist a skilled worker at some point.
What I can suggest to my former university is to try regrouping classes to have as few students as possible and also to take practicals seriously as part of a technical course schedule since this will truly create a strong background for graduates on field.
It really doesn’t sound good if you can call yourself a graduate but on field you can’t interpret a simple project given.