The DLF AIG Content Reuse Working Group is developing tools and documentation to better assess the reuse of digital objects. This is particularly of relevance to GLAMR practitioners since there are no established definitions, standards, or common practices for the assessment of digital object reuse. This presentation will focus on two deliverables: a set of reuse assessment data collection Recommended Practices and Ethical Guidelines for assessing reuse. Presenters will provide an overview of the Recommended Practices and associated tools that practitioners can utilize to collect reuse assessment data. They will introduce the Ethical Guidelines and discuss how practitioners can use them to develop more considerate assessment practices for understanding the reuse of the collections they steward. The Guidelines aim to examine the social and political overtures of those working in and impacted by GLAMR environments, and the importance of aligning ethics, values, and accountability in the work process from which future peers draw. Presenters will conclude the talk by articulating how the Recommended Practices and Ethical Guidelines begin to address the lack of standards and common practices for assessing reuse as well as by situating these outputs in the IMLS-funded project “Digital Content Reuse Assessment Framework Toolkit.”