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Help a Brooklet Elementary student become the national Doodle for Google winner

10-year-old Davine Chen is the state winner for Georgia, and you can help her become the national winner by voting now through June 4! If she wins, she would receive a $55,000 college scholarship and a $50,000 technology prize for her school. Her doodle would be featured on Google’s home page for 24 hours.
davinechen-google
Teacher Sarah Johnson and Davine Chen at BES | Bulloch County Schools

Brooklet Elementary School is home to Georgia's 2024 Doodle for Google winner, and you can vote online now through June 4 for her to be the national winner.

Davine Chen, 10, received a special visitor at school on May 23, an official representative from Google, who presented her with an award designating her as the state winner for Georgia in the 4-5 Grade category. Chen is the daughter of Zhan Chen and Yuting Zou of Statesboro.

She is now one of 55 winners, one for each state and territory of the United States. If selected as the national winner, she would receive a $55,000 college scholarship, a $50,000 technology prize for her school, plus her doodle would be featured on Google’s home page for 24 hours. Five national finalists will also be selected who will receive a $5,000 scholarship and their work featured in Google’s online doodle gallery.

Google held surprise school celebrations for each of the 55 state and territory winners. From this group, they will name five national finalists and ultimately, the national winner. Your vote will help determine the winner. To vote for Davine, follow these steps:

  • Visit https://doodles.google.com/d4g/vote/
  • Select the 4-5 Grade category and scroll down until you see the doodle with Georgia listed under it
  • Click on Georgia, confirm you are not a bot, and then cast your vote for Davine's artwork.
  • Vote before 11:59 p.m. (PST) on June 4, which is three hours behind our eastern standard time in Georgia.

This is Google's 25th anniversary year, so the theme for this year’s contest was "My wish for the next 25 years." Davine's Doodle for Google entry entitled, "Celebration at the dawn of a new paradise," describes her wish visually and in writing.

She wrote, "I wish to dance with my family at the dawn of 2049, with “G”: a recycling bin filled with plastic-eating bacteria and fungi that turn waste into nutrients, “g”: a water-filtering drone, “l”: a floating nature-hotel that purifies the air and helps migrating birds. My wish is to use art and technology to restore a cleaner, greener planet for the next 25 years."

The Doodle for Google contest is open to K-12 students. According to Google's website, this year's young artists could create their doodles using any materials they wanted. They were also allowed additional mediums of digital art, like virtual reality paintings, videos of stop-motion, songs, and poems. Entries were judged for artistic merit, their creativity, especially use of the theme and Google’s logo and letters.