This article explores the conceptual question of how to best integrate military culture and issues into social work education. Military service members, veterans, and their families are returning to civilian communities with the ending of conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan and seeking community-based providers for health and mental health treatments. Civilian social workers need to have an appreciation for the unique psychosocial stressors and needs of this population to be able to engage and intervene effectively with them. The military lifestyle and its demands require an understanding of topics that include coping and adaptation to stress, ecological and systems theories, family roles and functioning, community capacity to support the population, and the effect of these across the lifespan.Exigent means demanding attention, and when a situation is exigent, it generally calls for immediate and precise reactions based on thoughtful, well-informed decisions about what course of action to take next. The community of social work education has such a situation concerning how to best educate students and practitioners with regard to the needs of veterans, military service members, and family members affected as a result of that service. The purpose of this article is to offer suggestions for curriculum inclusion of material into the foundation courses of undergraduate and graduate social work programs. Although there are some schools that weave these topics into their required coursework seamlessly, we speculate that there are many that do not, and there has been no formal measurement nor exploration of this distinction. This disparity in the educational process across schools of social work leads to divergent competencies concerning a population with a unique culture and clinical presentation.The Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) keeps a list of military social work specialty programs in schools of social work that self-report holding concentrations, certificates, or specialized courses on the topics. Formal monitoring of this list is difficult at best due to the changing nature of specialized programming, yet rigorous research methods into the specifics of these offerings would offer valuable analytic data to the field. Social work students who know they want to focus on social work with the military or veteran population typically apply for field internships at local Veterans' Administration (VA) hospitals or affiliated vet centers.