Secondly, the enrollment of civil engineering graduate students is based on two disciplines, not the first-class discipline. As the children's shoes answered earlier, there are generally: structural engineering, bridge and tunnel engineering, highway and railway engineering, geotechnical engineering, municipal engineering, disaster prevention and mitigation engineering and so on.
Thirdly, I guess your question should be: Is the degree in civil engineering a professional master's degree? Well, the current masters are divided into "professional masters" and "academic masters". The former generally aims at full-time study after work, with a schooling period of two years and half tuition 12000. The latter aims at continuing undergraduate studies, with a schooling period of two and a half to three years, and the tuition fee is generally around 8,000.