Thank you for the quick reply ;D
G'day mate. I highly recommend you consider your options.
There are two ways into the New South Wales Police Force at time of writing: that is what has been suggested, the Associate Degree in Policing Practice (only administered at the NSW Police College in Goulburn, as far as I'm aware) and the Bachelor Degree which is the Bachelor of Justice Studies (Policing) which is administered at Charles Sturt University in Bathurst and University of Western Sydney (unsure of the exact suburb).
The Associate Degree is straight into the college for formal police
procedural training. You must fill out and complete the application and be assessed by Charles Sturt University (academically) and NSW Police (medically and professionally) before being accepted. With the Bachelor of Justice Studies (Policing) degree, you start and complete your application while studying at university. So if you find that things aren't going to work out, you can transfer into the Bachelor of Social Science (Criminal Justice) without penalty and back when things do work out. You can also look at the Australian Federal Police with the Social Science (Criminal Justice) degree.
I use the phrase "procedural policing" to differ between the two courses. I'm currently a second year Policing student at CSU Bathurst and undertaking the Bachelor Degree. I came into this degree straight from high school.
If you look at each course, you'll notice that the Bachelor's degree is much more thorough in the way that one has to do more study to achieve the same goal: attesting as a police officer. This is not all bad and there is a very good reason for this.
The Associate Degree in Policing Practice is just that, getting a degree in how to operate
procedurally as a police officer, or by the book. This is fine for those with a bit of life experience and those who can look at the "bigger picture", but in my opinion, it's not for everyone. The course really doesn't give you a grounding in why things happen and for what reason, or what makes people and society itself tick. This really isn't ideal (in my opinion) for someone who has just graduated from high school.
The way that the Bachelor of Justice Studies (Policing) is designed is to give you a background in how to use your head, not your hands; so to speak. You're given foundations in sociology (how society works), criminology (how we got to where we are in Criminal Justice), psychology (why people think the way they do), law (legal stuff) and other things that are really designed to make you take a step back and consider the underlying factors in why people do the things that we see on the news every night.
For example, a teenager has broken into a local corner store and stolen a few items (namely food). You'd think it's as simple as some kid stealing for the sake of stealing. The Bachelor degree is trying to teach you that the kid didn't steal for the sake of stealing, that there are factors that contributed to the teenagers behaviour: he's from a poor family, is struggling to survive and has to resort to stealing to survive. This also helps you to problem solve better. Charging and releasing isn't really going to fix the problem, as procedural policing would dictate, the child has to eat and can't afford food.
Prospects for police officers who hold a Bachelor degree are (from what we have been told) much higher. Better pay and better prospects of promotion.
It's up to you, but getting all of the information first is a good idea. What subjects are you currently undertaking? I suggest Legal Studies as that will be really useful to you in either degree.
Feel free to ask me any questions, good luck with your studies.
Oh and as Chris has said: Uni is much more fun. The Police College at Goulburn is going to be extremely tough on you.