An SFP+ module for 10GBase-T probably just isn't going to happen, because the
specification for SFP+ specifies a maximum of 1.5 watts for module power consumption (see Page 17), and 10GBase-T has taken a
lot more than that so far (see Page 7). The other problem that you're fighting is that for 10GBase-T, the power consumption increases somewhat with distance. While there's a possibility that improvements in PHY technology will get us down into the sub-1-Watt range for power burned by the actual transceiver, the problem is that you're still sending a significant amount of power into the copper, which would need to be sourced by the SFP+ slot.
We'll be stuck with crappy media converters. There are several of those available, but you really don't want to use them unless you absolutely positively have to. Media converters are kinda like PoE power injector midspans or anything else that sits external to your switch and adds another bit of gear to your rack. An example would be
http://estore.perle.com/smi-10gt-sfp.aspx - and just so we're clear, I'm not saying that any specific manufacturer's device is crappy, but rather that the entire concept of needing to add a translational device is crappy. I would hope that for $1200, the Perle gadget is awesome, and it appears to be, since it has management capabilities and supports "TACACS+, RADIUS, LDAP, Kerberos, NIS and RSA. Manage via SNMP, CLI- Telnet/SSH or HTTPS."