Quincy,
If you want to get the training you so obviously need, go to www.leaguelineup.com/jbbc. You can contact one of the Jaramillo staff and they can hook you up.
Any thread that discusses hitting should give the right information and "symptom resolution" is not proper instruction. Amateur hitting instructors do not realize how much damage can be done to a young hitter by telling them things that will always produce bad habits. As an instructor, it is critical that you teach the student how to be his own coach. You do this by giving him an understanding of the root cause of his hitting problems, current and future. (After all Quincy, the hitter can't stop in the middle of the game and PM you to find out what they are doing wrong).
The lower half drives the hands and 90% of the problems with the hands stem from poor lower body mechanics. If you focus on the proper technique in your lower half, (the proper pivot/closed front side/square to the plate) the natural "hand/eye" ability of the athlete will take care of itself.
Regarding Rudy Jaramillo, once again you are obviously misinformed so you should go back and check your facts. Every other hitting coach in the history of Major League baseball has had players that had already "learned their trade" but they didn't produce hitters like Mr. Jaramillo. He will also be the only hitting instuctor ever inducted to the MLB Hall of Fame. His nephew Aaron runs the Jaramillo Baseball Club in Ft. Worth, Texas. Go to the web site above and see what success the "Jaramillo" has on hitters that haven't already "learned their trade". When you can take boys 14 - 15 years old and have them beating 18 year old teams with pitchers throwing in the mid to upper 80's with off speed, you must be doing something right. I have personally witnessed over the last two years, the transformation of over twenty five young men into polished, disciplined and productive hitters that make "mid at-bat" adjustments during the heat of the game.
Good bye Quincy.