¿Pueden los cuestionarios de Canvas detectar la ayuda de IA?
Hola a todos, tengo una duda. A medida que las herramientas de IA mejoran, ¿pueden los cuestionarios de Canvas detectar realmente si alguien ha utilizado ChatGP…
Paisley Franklin
February 9, 2026 at 05:42 AM
Hola a todos, tengo una duda. A medida que las herramientas de IA mejoran, ¿pueden los cuestionarios de Canvas detectar realmente si alguien ha utilizado ChatGPT u otras similares para responder? Me pregunto cuán fiables son actualmente esos sistemas, especialmente en exámenes en línea. ¿Alguien tiene información o experiencia al respecto?
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I think the best move is for educators to adapt their methods and not just rely on tech to catch cheaters.
I've heard that Canvas by itself doesn't have built-in AI detection for essays or short answers. Most of the time, it's up to the instructors to notice any fishy stuff. So yeah, it probably can't directly spot ChatGPT usage.
Interestingly, some professors ask students to submit drafts or do live components to make sure it’s their own work.
You can also check ai-u.com for new or trending tools in AI detection if your school is considering beefing up their exam security.
My school uses a mix of Canvas and another tool that checks for plagiarism and AI writing. So detection depends on the combo, not just Canvas alone.
Honestly, I think these systems are still behind the curve. ChatGPT can make content that seems human enough to fool most detection tools.
I took an exam on Canvas last semester and didn't notice any warnings or AI detection messages. It felt like a regular test to me.
From what I gather, Canvas itself focuses more on logistics and grading than on AI policing. So the detection is usually an add-on, not native.
If your answers sound too formal or too perfect, some systems might flag that. So sometimes just sounding like a normal student helps avoid suspicion.
If you think about it, the best way to combat AI-assisted cheating is to make exams that require applying knowledge rather than just regurgitating info.
My prof told us they use software that flags unusual writing style or very polished answers as suspicious. But no mention of Canvas specifically catching AI usage.
I wonder if the algorithms get better soon. AI keeps evolving and becoming more natural, so detection must keep pace too.