Purposeful Aging

Finding Purpose After Retirement

Overview

Retirement is not the end of contribution — it is the beginning of a new chapter shaped by choice, connection, and meaning.

1. What This Is

Retirement marks a significant transition — and for many seniors, it raises a question that no one quite prepares you for: what now?
The loss of a work identity, daily structure, and sense of contribution can feel disorienting — even for those who were looking forward to slowing down. Research consistently shows that this loss of purpose affects not just emotional wellbeing, but physical health as well.
The good news is that purpose is not something fixed. It can be rebuilt — through connection, contribution, and finding meaningful roles within your community.

2. What Is Purposeful Ageing?

Purposeful ageing is the idea that meaningful engagement — not just health or financial security — is essential to ageing well.

It does not mean staying busy for the sake of it. It means staying connected to something that matters:

  • Supporting another senior who needs companionship
  • Sharing knowledge and life experience
  • Contributing to your community in meaningful ways

At SG Assist, we believe purpose is sustained when it is supported — through structured opportunities, peer communities, and clear pathways forward.

3. Why Purpose Matters

Seniors with a strong sense of purpose:

  • Experience lower rates of depression and anxiety
  • Maintain better cognitive and physical health
  • Recover more quickly from illness
  • Report significantly higher life satisfaction

However, purpose does not sustain itself. Without the right environment — peer support, shared goals, and meaningful roles — even motivated individuals may disengage.

SG Assist’s programmes are designed to create and sustain these conditions over time.

4. Where to Begin

There is no single “right” starting point. Every senior’s journey is different.

Some begin by learning something new.
Others start by joining a community.
Some step directly into volunteering and discover purpose through action.

What matters is taking the first step — and having support along the way.

5. Your Starting Points with SG Assist
Silver Sparks — Start with Community

A peer community for senior volunteers to connect, learn, and explore new ways to contribute before committing to a specific role.

What to expect:

  • Monthly gatherings and activities
  • Peer-led interest groups
  • Learning workshops and sharing sessions

→ Learn about Silver Sparks

SkillsFuture Courses — Build New Skills

Senior-friendly, nationally recognised courses in areas such as:

  • Gerontechnology
  • Healthy ageing
  • Caregiving skills

What to expect:

  • Short courses (1–3 days or modular sessions)
  • Hands-on, practical learning
  • Subsidised or fully funded options

Browse courses

Volunteer Training — Learn and Contribute

Structured training programmes that prepare you for meaningful community roles:

  • Age-Friendly Ambassadors
  • Caregiving Navigators
  • Community Care Ambassadors

Programme structure:

  • Duration: 12–16 hours over 2–4 weeks
  • Format: In-person, group-based sessions
  • Includes: practical training, roleplay, and guided placement

Explore volunteer training

Age+ Living Lab — Discover and Engage

Visit Singapore’s first community gerontechnology lab, guided by trained senior ambassadors.

What to expect:

  • Hands-on exploration of assistive technology
  • Peer-led learning experience
  • Opportunity to train as a GeronTech Ambassador

Visit the Age+ Living Lab

6. What Happens Next

Your journey does not stop at the first step.

Seniors who begin with SG Assist often go on to:

  • Join a volunteer role in the community
  • Participate in Silver Sparks for ongoing engagement
  • Take on microjob roles with flexible, compensated work
  • Progress into the Pathways programme for workforce re-entry

Each step builds on the last — creating a supported journey from exploration to meaningful contribution.

7. Not Sure Where to Start?

You don’t have to figure it out alone.

We can help you explore your interests, understand your options, and take the first step at your own pace.

Care Agents - Microjobs

Overview

A structured microjob role for seniors supporting isolated and homebound seniors in the community.

1. What This Role Is

A Care Agent is a trained senior who provides companionship, light monitoring, and social support to isolated or homebound seniors in the community.

This role is delivered in partnership with Fei Yue Community Services.

Care Agents are not informal helpers. They are trained, structured contributors working within a defined support framework to improve social connection and wellbeing among vulnerable seniors.

2. What Care Agents Do

Care Agents carry out structured community support tasks, which may include:

  • Conducting regular home visits or phone check-ins
  • Providing companionship and conversation to reduce isolation
  • Observing general wellbeing and changes in behaviour or condition
  • Conducting basic home safety awareness checks
  • Escalating concerns to relevant care teams when needed
  • Supporting connection to community services where appropriate

Each task is guided by training and clear boundaries to ensure safety and consistency.

3. Who This Role Is For

This role is suitable for seniors who are:

  • Aged 50 and above
  • Warm, patient, and reliable
  • Comfortable engaging with other seniors in their homes or by phone
  • Interested in contributing meaningfully to their community
  • Able to commit to a consistent but flexible schedule

Prior caregiving experience is helpful but not required.

What matters most is:

  • empathy
  • consistency
  • willingness to engage
4. Training & Preparation

All Care Agents undergo structured training before deployment.

Training includes:

1. Home Visit Protocols
  • Safe entry and exit procedures
  • Respectful engagement in private homes
  • Cultural sensitivity in household settings
2. Communication Skills
  • Active listening techniques
  • Building trust and rapport
  • Supporting emotionally vulnerable seniors
3. Recognising Risk Indicators
  • Identifying signs of decline or distress
  • Knowing when and how to escalate concerns
  • Maintaining appropriate boundaries
4. Understanding Community Care Systems
  • Overview of local support services
  • Referral pathways
  • Coordination with partner organisations
5. Volunteer Wellbeing & Boundaries
  • Managing emotional load
  • Role clarity
  • Self-care practices in community work
Programme format:
  • Structured training sessions prior to placement
  • Practical role-based preparation
  • Ongoing support during deployment
5. Commitment & Structure

Care Agent roles are designed to be flexible and sustainable.

Typical structure:

  • Flexible scheduling based on availability
  • Assigned caseload of seniors or visits
  • Ongoing coordination with partner organisation (Fei Yue Community Services)
  • Regular check-ins with SG Assist or partner supervisors

This ensures the role remains manageable while still impactful.

6. Our Track Record

Since 2021:

  • 210 seniors trained and deployed as Care Agents
  • Delivered in partnership with Fei Yue Community Services
  • Supporting isolated and homebound seniors across community settings
  • Contributing to sustained social connection and early risk detection

Care Agents have become one of SG Assist’s most established microjob pathways.

7. How This Fits the Bigger System

Care Agent is part of SG Assist’s four-stage purposeful ageing pathway:

  1. Purpose discovery
  2. Structured volunteering
  3. Microjob participation
  4. Pathways (extended contribution / workforce transition)

Care Agents typically emerge from volunteer training programmes such as:

  • Community Care Ambassadors
  • Age-Friendly Ambassadors
8. For Organisations

Organisations can partner with SG Assist to implement the Care Agent model within their community care services.

We provide:

  • Training framework and curriculum
  • Volunteer recruitment and onboarding
  • Role design and deployment structure
  • Coordination with partner agencies

Outcome:
A trained, reliable senior workforce supporting community care delivery in a structured and scalable way.

What's Next?

Interested in becoming a Care Agent or implementing this model?

  • Express Interest
  • Explore Other Microjob Roles
  • Learn About SG Assist Programmes

Gerontech Ambassador - Microjobs

Overview

 A trained senior role guiding peers to understand and evaluate assistive technology for independent ageing.

1. What This Role Is

A GeronTech Ambassador is a trained senior who leads guided experiences at the Age+ Living Lab, helping other seniors and caregivers understand and evaluate assistive technology.

This role is delivered in partnership with the Singapore University of Social Sciences (SUSS).

GTAs are not technical experts — they are peer educators, using lived experience and structured training to make gerontechnology more accessible, relatable, and meaningful for other seniors.

2. What GeronTech Ambassadors Do

GTAs take on structured facilitation and engagement responsibilities, including:

  • Leading guided tours of the Age+ Living Lab (multi-site where applicable)
  • Demonstrating assistive devices across mobility, safety, cognition, and daily living
  • Facilitating peer discussions on ageing, independence, and technology adoption
  • Supporting visitors in evaluating product suitability using structured frameworks
  • Assisting in outreach sessions, pop-ups, and community engagement events

Their role bridges the gap between technology and lived experience.

3. Who This Role Is For

This role is suitable for seniors who are:

  • Curious about technology and ageing innovation
  • Comfortable speaking in small group settings
  • Interested in helping peers make informed decisions
  • Open to learning structured facilitation methods
  • Passionate about active and independent ageing

No technical background is required.

What matters most is:

  • credibility as a peer
  • willingness to learn
  • confidence in sharing experiences
4. Training & Certification

GeronTech Ambassadors undergo structured, SkillsFuture-recognised training:

Gerontechnology Training for Senior Ambassadors (TGS-2024045959)

Training covers:

1. Gerontechnology Fundamentals
  • Understanding ageing-related needs
  • Overview of assistive technology categories
  • Real-world applications in daily living
2. Structured Evaluation Framework (6As)
  • Awareness
  • Accessibility
  • Affordability
  • Acceptability
  • Applicability
  • Adaptability
3. Facilitation Skills
  • Leading small group discussions
  • Engaging diverse senior audiences
  • Managing questions and peer sharing
4. Tour Delivery & Engagement
  • Conducting guided walkthroughs
  • Explaining devices in simple, relatable language
  • Supporting experiential learning
5. Programme Outcomes & Track Record

Since launch:

  • 150+ GeronTech Ambassadors trained in partnership with SUSS
  • 500+ guided tours conducted at the Age+ Living Lab
  • 1,000+ hours of structured engagement delivered
  • Active participation in community outreach and learning events

GTAs play a key role in making assistive technology adoption more accessible and trusted among seniors

6. Commitment & Structure

GeronTech Ambassadors typically engage in:

  • Scheduled guided tours and sessions
  • Community outreach events (as available)
  • Flexible participation based on personal availability
  • Ongoing refresher and peer learning sessions

The role is designed to be sustainable, flexible, and supported.

7. How This Fits the SG Assist Pathway

This role sits within SG Assist’s structured ageing pathway:

  1. Purpose discovery
  2. Structured volunteering
  3. Microjob participation (GTA role)
  4. Pathways programme (extended contribution or workforce transition)

Many GTAs begin from volunteer training programmes such as:

  • Age-Friendly Ambassadors
  • Community Care Ambassadors
8. For Organisations

Organisations can collaborate with SG Assist to:

  • Host Age+ Living Lab tours
  • Deploy trained GTAs for outreach sessions
  • Integrate gerontechnology education into programmes
  • Co-develop community engagement activities

SG Assist provides:

  • Training framework
  • Ambassador pool
  • Session facilitation support
  • Programme coordination with SUSS
What's Next?

Interested in becoming a GeronTech Ambassador or hosting a session?

Caregiving Navigator

Overview

Support caregivers with empathy, lived experience, and practical guidance through Singapore’s care system.

1. What This Is

A Caregiving Navigator is a trained senior volunteer who provides empathetic guidance to caregivers navigating Singapore’s complex healthcare and social service landscape.

They are a trusted human link in a system that can feel overwhelming — someone who has been through it, understands it, and can help others find their way.

This role is developed in partnership with Montfort Care and is part of SG Assist’s broader effort to strengthen caregiver support within the community.

2. What Caregiving Navigators Do

Caregiving Navigators provide structured, ongoing support to caregivers, including:

  • Listening non-judgementally to caregivers sharing their challenges and concerns
  • Providing practical guidance on navigating the healthcare system
  • Connecting caregivers with the right subsidies, services, and community resources
  • Offering ongoing support and check-ins to caregivers in their caseload
  • Identifying and flagging signs of caregiver burnout or crisis to the relevant team
3. Who This Role Is For

Caregiving Navigators are seniors who have personal caregiving experience — either as a caregiver themselves or as someone who has navigated the care system for a family member.

That lived experience is the core of what makes this role so effective. Navigators are not providing clinical advice; they are providing human understanding, practical knowledge, and genuine presence.

This role is suitable for individuals who are:

  • Empathetic and patient
  • Comfortable listening and supporting others
  • Interested in giving back using their lived experience
  • Able to commit to supporting caregivers consistently
4. Training and Support

All Caregiving Navigators complete structured training covering:

  • Empathetic listening and non-judgmental support
  • Singapore’s healthcare and social service landscape
    Caregiver subsidies and referral pathways
  • Recognising and responding to caregiver burnout
    Self-care and boundaries for the Navigator

Navigators are trained alongside community grassroots partners to ensure hyper-local relevance and sustained community presence.

5. Programme Details

Training Duration:
2 days of in-person training (8 hours per day)

Format:

  • Interactive workshops
  • Case-based discussions
  • Roleplay and scenario simulations

Ongoing Support:

  • Regular check-ins with SG Assist or Montfort Care coordinators
  • Case discussion and escalation support
  • Peer sharing sessions with other Navigators
  • Access to continued learning and development opportunities

This ensures Navigators are supported within a structured and responsive system of care, rather than operating independently.

6. Our Partnership with Montfort Care

Montfort Care brings deep community relationships and a well-established caregiver support network. SG Assist brings the Navigator training framework and placement infrastructure.

Together, we are building a corps of seniors who extend the reach of caregiver support across Singapore’s heartlands.

7. What Happens Next

After completing training, Caregiving Navigators may:

  • Be deployed to support caregivers within partner organisations
  • Continue supporting caregivers through structured placements
  • Progress into microjob roles within SG Assist programmes
  • Explore further pathways such as the Pathways programme

This role can serve as both a meaningful volunteer contribution and a pathway into more structured and sustained participation.

8. Not Sure If This Is For You?

If you have caregiving experience and want to support others going through a similar journey, this role may be a meaningful next step.

You don’t need to have all the answers — just the willingness to listen, support, and show up for others.

What's Next?

Microjobs for Seniors

Overview

Flexible, structured, and meaningful roles designed for seniors who want to contribute — and be recognised for it.

  • Explore Microjob Roles

  • Explore Pathways Programme

1. What This Is

SG Assist has been operationalising microjob roles for seniors since 2021.

A microjob is a defined, flexible, compensated role designed around senior capabilities, availability, and lived experience. It is not traditional part-time work.

Instead, it sits between volunteering and employment — offering:

  • structure without rigidity
  • contribution without full-time pressure
  • recognition without formal employment constraints

This model enables seniors to stay active in their communities while contributing in meaningful, supported ways.

2. Why Microjobs Matter

Between full-time employment and unpaid volunteering, there is a significant gap in Singapore’s ageing landscape.

Many seniors:

  • want to stay active
  • have valuable experience to contribute
  • are unable or unwilling to commit to full-time work

Microjobs fill this gap.

They provide:

  • Flexibility — roles designed around capacity and lifestyle
  • Recognition — structured, defined responsibilities
  • Financial appreciation — compensation aligned to contribution
  • Purpose — meaningful roles rooted in lived experience

For the social service sector, microjobs also help expand service capacity by enabling trained seniors to support programmes in a structured way.

3. SG Assist Microjob Roles (Since 2021)

SG Assist has developed and deployed four core microjob roles in partnership with sector organisations.

Care Agent

In partnership with Fei Yue Community Services

Care Agents provide companionship and light community support to isolated or homebound seniors.

Key responsibilities:

  • Home visits or phone check-ins
  • Companionship and emotional support
  • Basic home safety observations
  • Referral of concerns to care teams

→ Read Care Agent role

GeronTech Ambassador (GTA)

In partnership with Singapore University of Social Sciences (SUSS)

GTAs lead guided tours at the Age+ Living Lab and help seniors evaluate assistive technology.

Key responsibilities:

  • Conduct guided tours
  • Demonstrate assistive devices
  • Facilitate peer discussions on ageing and technology
  • Apply structured evaluation frameworks

→ Read GTA role

Caregiving Navigator

In partnership with Montfort Care

Caregiving Navigators support caregivers navigating healthcare and social service systems.

Key responsibilities:

  • Provide empathetic listening and guidance
  • Explain care pathways and subsidies
  • Connect caregivers to services
  • Support caregiver wellbeing

→ Read Caregiving Navigator role

Intergenerational Reminiscence Facilitator

Within SG Assist Intergenerational Learning Programme

Facilitators lead structured storytelling sessions between seniors and youth.

Key responsibilities:

  • Facilitate guided reminiscence sessions
  • Use structured conversation toolkits
  • Encourage intergenerational exchange
  • Create safe, reflective environments

→ Read Reminiscence Facilitator role

4. Our Track Record

Since 2021:

  • 500+ seniors engaged in structured volunteer or microjob roles
  • 4 microjob roles developed with sector partners
  • Active deployment across community care and ageing programmes
  • Ongoing partnerships with Fei Yue Community Services, SUSS, and Montfort Care
5. What Comes Next

Microjobs are part of SG Assist’s four-stage purposeful ageing pathway:

  1. Purpose discovery
  2. Structured volunteering
  3. Microjob participation
  4. Supported workforce re-entry via Pathways

Seniors can progress across stages at their own pace, depending on their interest and capacity.

6. For Organisations

SG Assist partners with organisations to design and deploy microjob roles within existing service models.

We provide:

  • Role design and training framework
  • Volunteer recruitment and preparation
  • Placement and coordination support
  • Programmatic infrastructure

Outcome:
A trained, reliable senior workforce integrated into community care delivery.

→ Contact us to explore microjob partnerships

What's Next?
  • Interested in contributing in a structured and meaningful way?

    → Explore Microjob Roles
    → Learn about Pathways
    → Join SG Assist Programmes

Pathways Programmes

Overview

A structured programme that supports seniors transitioning from volunteering or microjobs into meaningful, flexible work participation.

  • Explore Pathways

  • Contact Us

1. What This Is

Pathways is SG Assist’s structured transition programme for seniors who are ready to take the next step beyond volunteering or microjobs.

It supports seniors in moving into:

  • part-time or flexible work
  • continued microjob participation
  • structured community roles
  • re-entry into meaningful workforce engagement

This is not a job placement service.

Instead, it is a guided transition programme built around:

  • individual strengths
  • personal pacing
  • supported decision-making
  • real-world readiness
2. Who It Is For

Pathways is designed for seniors who:

  • Have completed volunteer training or microjob roles
  • Want to contribute in a more sustained or compensated way
  • Prefer flexible, non-full-time work arrangements
  • Have skills or experience they want to continue using
  • Need structured support to explore next steps
3. What the Programme Provides

Pathways offers structured support across four areas:

1. Readiness Assessment

Seniors reflect on:

  • skills and experience
  • interests and preferences
  • work readiness and capacity
  • preferred type of engagement
2. Guided Transition Planning

Participants receive support in identifying suitable next steps, which may include:

  • microjob continuation or expansion
  • part-time or flexible roles
  • community-based paid roles
  • hybrid volunteering-work arrangements
3. Skills & Confidence Bridging

Depending on need, seniors may receive:

  • refresher training
  • digital confidence support
  • communication or workplace skills
  • role-specific preparation
4. Connection to Opportunities

SG Assist connects seniors to:

  • partner organisations
  • community-based roles
  • internal SG Assist microjob pathways
  • supported placement opportunities
4. How It Connects to SG Assist Pathway

Pathways is the final stage of SG Assist’s four-stage model:

  1. Purpose discovery
  2. Structured volunteering
  3. Microjob participation
  4. Pathways (supported re-entry into work or extended contribution)

Each stage builds on the previous one — ensuring seniors are not rushed, but steadily supported.

5. What Makes Pathways Different

Most employment or reintegration programmes focus on:

  • job matching
  • CVs and applications
  • external placement

Pathways is different because it starts with:

  • lived experience
  • community contribution history
  • confidence building
  • paced transition

It recognises that for many seniors, the barrier is not willingness — it is structure and support.

6. For Organisations

Pathways also supports organisations looking to:

  • engage experienced senior contributors
  • design flexible senior-friendly roles
  • integrate microjob-trained individuals into teams
  • build structured ageing workforce participation models

SG Assist works with partners to align roles with senior capability and community context.

What's Next?

Not sure what your next step looks like? We can help you explore it.

→ Explore Microjobs
→ Join Volunteer Programmes
→ Contact SG Assist

Silver Sparks

Overview

Silver Sparks
Connect · Grow · Give Back

A vibrant peer community for senior volunteers to stay connected, keep learning, and continue contributing meaningfully.

  • Join as a Senior Volunteer

  • Partner with Silver Sparks

1. What This Is

Silver Sparks is SG Assist’s peer community for senior volunteers — a shared platform that brings together seniors from different programmes, organisations, and backgrounds under one community.

It is not a programme. It is a community — one that senior volunteers shape, lead, and grow together.

2. Why Silver Sparks Exists

SG Assist observed a consistent pattern in senior volunteerism:

  1. Volunteers complete training
  2. They contribute meaningfully
  3. Then gradually disengage

Not because they stopped caring — but because they lost the sense of belonging and momentum that supported them during training.

Silver Sparks was created to solve this.

By providing a cross-programme, cross-organisation community, Silver Sparks creates the conditions for sustained engagement, ongoing connection, and continuous growth.

3. What Members Do
Stay Connected

Build meaningful friendships with fellow senior volunteers who share similar values, life stages, and interests.

Keep Learning

Participate in workshops, learning journeys, and capability-building sessions that sustain curiosity and growth — including topics such as digital tools, AI, and purposeful ageing.

Exchange Insights

Share experiences across different volunteering roles and life journeys. The collective knowledge within the community becomes a powerful resource for all members.

Contribute Anew

Discover new ways to give back — through existing SG Assist programmes, community initiatives, or member-led activities.

4. Member-Led Interest Groups

One of the most meaningful outcomes of Silver Sparks is the emergence of member-led groups.

These include:

  • Gardening groups
  • Pickleball and active ageing activities
  • Storytelling and reminiscence groups
  • Travel groups (e.g. Johor Bahru, Penang)
  • Walking soccer

These initiatives are not directed — they are created by members, reflecting genuine ownership and community strength.

5. How It Works with Organisations

Silver Sparks complements — not replaces — the work of partner organisations.

Volunteers remain connected to their respective organisations while gaining access to a broader peer community.

SG Assist provides the additional layer of:

  • Connection
  • Engagement
  • Cross-sector learning

This strengthens volunteer retention and overall experience.

6. What Happens Next

Silver Sparks is often the starting point or continuation of a senior’s journey.

Members may:

  • Join volunteer training programmes
  • Take on structured volunteer roles
  • Progress into microjob opportunities
  • Continue participating in community-led initiatives

The community evolves with its members — supporting both new and experienced volunteers.

7. Not Sure If This Is For You?

If you’re looking for connection, purpose, and a community where you can continue to grow and contribute, Silver Sparks offers a place to start or continue your journey.

You don’t need to commit to a specific role immediately — just come in, connect, and explore.

What's Next?
  • Join as a Senior Volunteer
  • Partner with Silver Sparks
  • Get in Touch