Submitted:
24 November 2025
Posted:
26 November 2025
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Abstract
This study highlights the distinction between parents’ general well-being and parental well-being. It reveals the interplay between daily parenting behaviors and individual well-being, as well as the impact of one partner’s (particularly fathers’) behaviors on the other partner’s well-being. These findings contribute to broadening the discourse on parenting by shifting the focus beyond child outcomes to include the role of parenting behaviors in promoting parents’ own well-being and family resilience. This study examined mothers’ and fathers’ daily parenting behaviors through the lens of the Parenting Pentagon Model, which identifies five constructs of beneficial parenting: Partnership, Leadership, Expressions of Love, Encouraging Independence, and Adherence to Rules. The study explored the associations between parenting behaviors and parents’ general and parental well-being. Participants included 170 Israeli parents (85 couples) with young children aged six months to nine years. They completed self-report measures assessing parenting behaviors, well-being, and sociodemographic factors (e.g., family size, education, employment). Analyses explored how sociodemographic factors and parenting behaviors explain parental and general well-being within and across genders. Parents reported frequent beneficial parenting behaviors, with Love being the most prevalent. Mothers reported significantly higher Love behaviors, while other constructs showed no gender differences. Parenting behaviors strongly predicted well-being: Mothers’ behaviors explained 48% (parental) and 44% (general) of their well-being, while fathers’ behaviors explained 35% and 23%, respectively. Fathers’ behaviors more strongly predicted mothers’ well-being (24% parental, 22% general) than mothers’ behaviors predicted fathers’ well-being (13% parental, 11% general). Socio-demographic factors (family size and employment) were associated with maternal well-being.
Keywords:
1. Introduction
Partnership
Leadership
Expressions of Love
Encouraging Independence
Adherence to Rules
Focus on Early Childhood
Links to Parental Well-Being
General and Parental Well-Being
Parental Behavior and Parental Well-Being
Research Aims
- (1)
- To describe and compare the daily parenting behaviors of mothers and fathers as defined by the PPM and assess their parental and general well-being.
- (2)
- To explore the relationship between mothers’ and fathers’ parenting behaviors and their respective levels of parental and general well-being, controlling for demographic factors (parents’ education, parents’ age, number of weekly working hours, and number of children in the family).
- (3)
- To examine the associations between mothers’ parenting behaviors and fathers’ parental and general well-being, and vice versa, between fathers’ parenting behaviors and mothers’ parental and general well-being.
Parenting Behaviors of Mothers and Fathers
- Both mothers and fathers will exhibit more Love and Partnership behaviors com- pared to Rules and Independence behaviors.
- Positive correlations will be observed among the five PPM constructs, indicating that parents who demonstrate a high level of parental behavior in one construct are likely to show high levels of behavior in the other.
- Within families, positive correlations will be found between the parenting behavior of fathers and mothers.
- Parents’ well-being
- Fathers will report higher levels of general and parental well-being than mothers. Parental daily behaviors and well-being:
- Mothers’ and fathers’ beneficial parenting behavior will positively correlate with their general well-being, even while controlling for demographic factors.
- Fathers’ beneficial parenting behavior, according to the PPM, will positively predict mothers’ general well-being, and vice versa, beyond demographic factors
2. Materials and Methods Participants
Measurements
Procedure
Data Analysis
3. Results
Descriptive Statistics
| Mothers | Fathers | |||||
| Range | M (SD) | Range | M (SD) | t-test | r | |
| The PPM1 | ||||||
| Partnership | 1.43-5.79 | 4.48 (0.83) | 3.23-5.86 | 4.58 (0.66) | -1.43 | .65*** |
| Leadership | 3.11-5.67 | 4.54 (0.55) | 3.22-5.78 | 4.52 (0.51) | 0.36 | .54*** |
| Love | 2.82-5.88 | 4.86 (0.57) | 3.06-5.71 | 4.70 (0.57) | 2.38** | .44*** |
| Independence | 3.36-5.55 | 4.28 (0.48) | 2.45-5.27 | 4.23 (0.53) | 0.80 | .27** |
| Rules | 2.43-5.50 | 4.27 (0.60) | 3.36-5.64 | 4.30 (0.52) | -0.29 | .49*** |
| Parental well-being | ||||||
| Positive feelings | 2.90-6.00 | 4.92 (0.79) | 3.00-6.00 | 4.88 (0.70) | 0.38 | .41*** |
| Negative feelings | 1.00-5.09 | 2.74 (0.82) | 1.00-4.45 | 2.51 (0.71) | 2.32* | .31** |
| General well-being1,2 | ||||||
| Positive feelings | 2.36-5.91 | 4.15 (0.83) | 2.36-5.55 | 4.24 (0.68) | -0.80 | .38** |
| Negative feelings | 1.33-4.80 | 2.82 (0.76) | 1.50-3.89 | 2.48 (0.61) | 3.07** | .21 |
- Figure 1. Description of parents’ report of their implementation of the five PPM constructs.
Mothers’ and Fathers’ Parental and General Well-Being
Associations Between Parenting Behaviors (PPM) and Parents’ Parental and General Well-Being: Relations within Gender
| Mothers (n = 85) | Fathers (n = 85) | ||||||||
|
Parental well-being (β) |
General well-being (β) |
Parental well-being (β) |
Parental well-being (β) |
||||||
| Step 1 | |||||||||
| No. of children | -.22^ | .09 | -.12 | -.14 | |||||
| M. Working hours | .22^ | .22 | .21 | .01 | |||||
| Step 2 | |||||||||
| No. of children | -.21* | .09 | -.11 | -.13 | |||||
| M. Working hours | .07 | .07 | .09 | -.07 | |||||
| Parenting (PPM) | .71*** | .68*** | .61*** | .49*** | |||||
| R2 | ΔR2 | R2 | ΔR2 | R2 | ΔR2 | ||||
| Step 1 | |||||||||
| Background measures | .10* | .05 | .06 | .02 | |||||
| Step 2 | |||||||||
| Parenting (PPM) | .58 | .48** | .49 | .44*** | .41 | .35*** | .25 | .23*** | |
The Relationship Between Parenting Behaviors (PPM) and Parents’ Parental and General Well-Being Beyond the Family Background Measures: Relations Across Genders
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4. Discussion
Parenting Behaviors and Gender Differences
Parents’ Well-Being (General and Parental) and Its Predictors
Cross-Gender Influences
Practical Implications
Limitations and Future Directions
5. Conclusion
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