Yes, it's because you multiplied the expression by 2 at the start, so you (correctly) found the minimum of twice the teacher's LHS.
But that is not an error! There is nothing wrong in clearing fractions by multiplying both sides of an inequality by 2. You have shown that the minimum of your LHS is 87/8, which is correct (though you did omit a 2, as marked). Nothing in the problem says that you have to find the minimum of the undoubled LHS; you have successfully shown that the given inequality is true.
Possibly your teacher, expecting to see the minimum of the expression he used, and also seeing the omitted 2 that made your final expression look like his, accidentally confused the two. Or perhaps you are being considered wrong merely for not doing exactly what the teacher did. (I hope not.)