about tscion.

Tscion is the managing chapter for Larn, a private 501c3 organization with charitable, environmental educational, literary, and scientific services. Tscion is located within the State of Colorado (2021-Chapter), facilitating the Rural to Living Sustainably Project, a program created research rural living innovation and sustainability methods; community outreach. Tscion also manages its Larn program for youth environmental education learning in the State of California
and Illinois (2023-Chapter).

Our Mission

Increase environmental education literacy, ecological research, and improve environmental preparedness knowledge based on EPA’s Region 9 (California), Region 5 (Illinois), and Region 8 (Colorado).

Why the name Tscion?

The word tscion originated during ancient ingenuity of agriculture, most popularly known as grafting. The tscion is the young shoot or twig of a plant, that allows the detached living portion of a plant (such as a bud or shoot) to be joined to other plants for expanded growth.  

Our organization uses the word Tscion to fuse humanity’s advancements and contribution to environmental, cultural, and sustainable innovation from generational farmers and sustainability advocates.

Tscion works to unify the various ecological and generational knowledge of American Rural, City Dwellers, Indigenous, and International communities to expanded growth and research sustainability innovation. 

Certified Support

Larn provides registered MTSS community consulting and certified education services with the Colorado Department of Education State, Illinois State Board of Education, and Head Start-Site Supervision with the California Department of Education for Environmental Education curricula.

Lessons to turn non/low skilled-swimmers into stronger swimmers. These lessons were funded to assist under-resourced youth that live within high flooded areas.

larn.

Our youth environmental education program’s goal is to improve environmental literacy and emergency awareness for youth in California, Illinois, and Colorado. Utilizing our TREEES & LEEAF methods, both frameworks are presented to assist state and local participants how to find new ways to safely engage students with nature.

Supporting Organizations & Departments