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Doodle 4 Google, also stylized Doodle4Google, is an annual competition in various countries, held by Google, to have children create a Google doodle that will be featured on the local Google homepage as a doodle.
The National winner will take home a $55,000 college scholarship and their school will receive a $50,000 tech package towards the establishment or improvement of a computer lab or technology program.
Doodle for Google is an annual contest where K-12 students create their own versions of the Google logo. Martin County High School student's artwork wins nomination, could soon be on Google ...
May 25—Glacier High School student Anitha Ravipati is the Montana winner for 16th annual Doodle for Google contest. Ravipati is one of 55 state and territory winners whose artwork will be ...
Entries in the contest may be paintings or drawings. The program is designed to be "a dynamic arts curriculum that teaches wetlands and waterfowl conservation to students from kindergarten through high school". [2] The best of show winner from each state participates in a national tour of entries and is forwarded to the national competition.
The Google Art Project was a development of the virtual museum projects of the 1990s and 2000s, following the first appearance of online exhibitions with high-resolution images of artworks in 1995. In the late 1980s, art museum personnel began to consider how they could exploit the internet to achieve their institutions' missions through online ...
Google named Nidhi Kantha, 11, the Kansas winner in its annual national art contest that seeks a design to be featured as the "Google doodle" on the website's homepage.
The contest was originally the Google Highly Open Participation Contest, but in 2010, the format was modified. Students that completed tasks won certificates and T-shirts. Each organization also selected two grand prize award winners who would earn a free trip to Google's Headquarters located in Mountain View, California.