A little while back we discussed this and one of my idea was , I am not sure if it was here or on another one but here is how it goes.
Setup a school/ workshop, where students can come and practice the art, you don't even need a bat making legend there just someone with basic knowledge of how to use the tools etc. Once a week, every 2 weeks or Monthly get a big name pod shaver to come in for half a day and spend with students. inspect their work, teach techniques, then students have time to practice. If this was a four month course you have 4 podshavers that have come in for half a day each, students have had time to practice and their work inspected by actual craftsmen. Fee should cover the cost of everything, as you would want to compensate the bat makers for their time. That will get the students exposure to different skills from different bat makers, they will get instilled with good values and love of the craft. Top students would/could then be available to be cherry picked by these bat makers to come work if they needed help. I mean its common sense, bat makers are getting paid for their time, passing their trade and then they get to pick out help that they have seen develop over months.
Going back to KS by JM, well as much as I agree with Sudeep's point that you can't make a pod shaver in a week or transfer all your knowledge I also think Sudeep you are missing a point. We hire Uni students to come work with us on short terms, there is no way they will learn a lot over a short period of time (usually 2-3 months) but of the 100's of students that have passed through our doors even if one finds his/her passion then the program is successfull. Everyone likes the idea of being a bat maker but when you really do it you can figure out pretty quickly if you are cut out for this, so you are providing value for their money, sometimes its worth knowing what you can't do, similarly if 1 kid discovers that this is it, then he/she will go back and find the means to make it happen. Remember no matter how good your teacher is you can't learn something if you don't want to learn what the teacher is teaching and you have to make your own mistakes, practice and try to absorb the lessons. JM can stop you from howlers and share little tid-bits but he can't force you to pick up tools after you are done your course and gone back home. Everyone who signs up could be of different skill set and might absorb different things from the same course.
I think its a great idea and kudos to him for trying to do something, he could have sat at home and thought lets hire someone to make my bats and keep making a mint selling bats but he is doing something for the craft, even if not everyone thinks/ see's it that way.