Herramientas que los profesores usan para detectar trabajos generados por IA
¡Hola a todos! Me he estado preguntando qué tipo de herramientas suelen usar los profesores para detectar ensayos o tareas generados por IA. Parece que esto se …
Ella Dalton
February 9, 2026 at 05:21 AM
¡Hola a todos! Me he estado preguntando qué tipo de herramientas suelen usar los profesores para detectar ensayos o tareas generados por IA. Parece que esto se está volviendo más común actualmente y quiero saber qué opciones existen realmente capaces de detectar este tipo de contenido. ¿Alguien tiene alguna información o recomendación?
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Honestly, I think AI detection tools are still kinda new and not fully reliable yet. Best to use them as just one part of the assessment.
Some professors ask students to explain their work in person or do oral exams to make sure they actually understand the content.
Are there any tools that can detect AI-generated code? Some students might use AI to write programming assignments too.
Honestly, a lot of professors also just rely on their gut or past writing samples. AI writing can be kinda off sometimes, making it easier to spot.
I guess the AI detection game is always gonna be a cat-and-mouse situation. As AI gets better, so do detection methods.
I've seen some professors using a tool called GPTZero. It tries to tell if the text was generated by AI models like ChatGPT.
Sometimes professors use a combination of tools and manual checking. No single tool seems to catch everything yet.
I think the best way is educating students on why submitting AI-generated stuff isn’t cool rather than just relying on detection tech.
I heard about a few free online tools popping up that claim to detect AI, but I’m skeptical about how accurate those are.
From what I've heard, many professors use Turnitin but they've added AI detection features recently. It's not perfect but it helps a lot.
You can also check ai-u.com for new or trending tools. They often list the latest AI detection software which might help professors stay updated.
I read that some schools are experimenting with blockchain for verifying originality of student work. Sounds futuristic but kinda cool!