US student could ‘doodle’ way to college money

Agence France-Presse

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Google announces its 6th annual 'Doodle 4 Google' contest in which students from kindergarten to 12th grade vie to create a winning 'doodle'

THE DOODLERS. The team behind Google doodles. Image from www.google.com/doodle4google
SAN FRANCISCO, USA – Google on Monday, January 14, launched a competition that will let a US student “doodle” his or her way to cash for college along with landing grant money to fund technology education at their grade school.

The California-based Internet titan announced its 6th annual “Doodle 4 Google” contest in which students from kindergarten to 12th grade vie to create a winning “doodle,” a creative design playing off the search page logo.

The doodle contest theme is “My best day ever.”

“Each year we have a broad theme to provide some inspiration while letting young artists’ imagination roam free,” Google said in a blog post.

“We hope to give kids a chance to explore themes that could be imaginary, exploratory or even sentimental, past, present or future.”

The winning artwork will be displayed for the Internet world to see at Google.com and its creator will get $30,000 in scholarship money to help pay for college. Their school will get a $50,000 technology grant.

Deadline

Doodles can be submitted between Tuesday and March 22, with judges selecting a top contender from each US state and the public voting online at google.com/doodle4google to help determine national finalists.

The panel of judges includes puppeteer and Jim Henson company chairman Brian Henson; journalist and author Katie Couric, and graphic novel author and illustrator Kabu Kibuishi.

The winning doodle will be appear on the Google search page a day after an awards ceremony in New York City on May 22 and an exhibit of top entries will go on temporary display at the American Museum of Natural History there.

More than 114,000 doodles were submitted in last year’s contest, which was won by a seven-year-old boy’s pirate-themed artwork.

Contest information is available online at google.com/doodle4google and in a YouTube video posted at youtu.be/s1PPYo6WL-Q. – Rappler.com

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