Level students (400) prepare a bachelor’s project in specific subjects identified by departmental councils during the academic year. An additional four-week period is allocated to the project, which begins after the completion of the second-semester exam and is under the supervision of the faculty members to organize, supervise, and discuss projects. At the end of the period allocated for the project, the student submits a scientific report on the subject of the graduation project and discusses it. The study also includes summer semesters for theoretical and practical training for students of levels 000, 100, and 200 inside and outside the institute and is implemented under the supervision of faculty members in the following areas:
A. Engineering drawing training:
For a month inside the institute after the second-semester exams for level 000.
B. Training workshops and laboratories:
For a month inside the institute after the second-semester exams for level 100.
C. Field training:
For a period of six weeks following the second-semester exams for level 200 in public and industrial facilities, the student submits at the end of the training a detailed report on what is a tool in this training, and the concerned department holds an oral exam to discuss and evaluate it. Students may be trained outside the Republic based on the approval of the Institute Council. The student does not obtain a bachelor’s degree unless he successfully performs both of the previous exercises.
To obtain a bachelor’s degree, a student must complete 180 credit hours of coursework with a grade of at least a D.
A student is granted an honorary degree if his final estimate is excellent or very good, provided that his public estimate is not less than very good at any level of study and that the number of study units he studied each semester is not less than 180. A student must not fail any exam taken at any level of study in order to receive the honorary degree.