I have some plyo integrated in the lessons.
In the (later part) of the warming-up or maybe better said when moved to the strechting and strength parth.
Firstly, I like running and then touching the floor and jump up (stretch the body).
Then when going to stretching (after some static strechting), some dynamic strechting of which parts might be seen as plyo: one leg is raised, then jump kick with the other one, while landing on the leg that was raised. So it's kind of leg raises with jumps.
Alternatively we don't run, but stay on a spot with the warm-up. Then many exercises, like jumping jacks, leg raise jumps (front leg goes out all the time and then touches the floor jumping in the same rythm as the back leg), horse stance frog jumps (not as deep as normal frog jumps, in order not to damage the kneews), squad jumps (after slow squads in the warming-up), switch front leg horse stance jumps.
Anyway, I got into plyo through strechting research.
Firstly through Tom Kurz's method, based on Eastern Europe research. Some of his exercises might be a little questionable for the knees though - you have to be careful not to bend the knees so much in e.g. squad lifts. Also his program is not so complete, so I started to search more.
In martial arts (stretching and strength training) there is Christophe Carrio:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?gl=US&v=d81SyR-WUoA
And you wouldn't believe it, but on the home selling channel they finally have a product that works: P90X - it looks like a well built and researched work-out program. "Part 2 (plyometrics)" has many interesting plyo exercises, several I already used.
http://www.videofitness.com/reviews/hor ... x-plyo.php
(just search google for P90X and downloads will show up)
Just for the arms I haven't found much yet (except push ups with clapping or throwing a 'medicine' ball).
What do you do there?