http://appsychology.com/HowPass/MC%20quizes/Psychological%20Disorders/psychological_disorders.htm
This website here is a good practice to see what all you should study when it comes to Psychological Disorders. This has 95 different multiple choice questions for you to practice with. I highly recommend checking it out.
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/psychopathology/mcq/chapter11.asp
Here's another website to check out. It also has some multiple choice questions to do, along with the answers, and an explanation for the answer, so that you may understand the concept the question's asking about better.
http://www.sparknotes.com/psychology/psych101/disorders/section1.rhtml
Another site that will help you figure out some different possiblities of questions that might be on the college board exam. Using these different resources will also help you to get used to doing multiple choice questions written by someone other than Ms. Wood. While these one's don't necessarily have the answers as to why the correct answers are what they are, but I do think with a little bit of research, and a teeny bit of common sense, you should be able to figure out why answers are the way they are. This site is also just really good at giving a bit of a better (in some cases) overview of what these things are actually about.
http://wps.pearsoned.co.uk/ema_uk_he_PX14_clinpsych/244/62717/16055571.cw/content/index.html
While this quiz is quite short, I do think that you could benefit from at least taking a look at all four of these websites to be able to help you do more multiple choice style questions. I have taken a couple of questions from each resource, so some of them may look familiar to you.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/rethinking-psychology/201307/the-new-definition-mental-disorder
Here is one final link to an article, that describes better than I ever could the difference in definitions in the DSM-IV and the DSM-V. The article covers why it is so hard to define something that is in the brain, rather than manifests itself in physical symptoms, and how right now it is more, which definition seems to fit our current need and purpose. I think it does a great job at describing the current and a past definition of psychological disorders both.
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