You said that you were "taught" that. Who taught you that? Do you have any notes? Are you sure you remember correctly what you were taught?
View attachment 350062Your derivation is incorrect. Look at the drawing on the right. It is a free body diagram (FBD) of the wheel.
- You wrote Newton's second law only for the angular acceleration about the center of mass and omitted Newton's second law for the linear acceleration of the center of mass, ##a_{\text{cm}}## which also involves the force of static friction ##f_s##.
- The torque equation that you wrote, presumably about the center O, omits the torque due to static friction.
As for the "general knowledge" of the acceleration ratio, it can be deduced from the FBD. The wheel accelerates to the right without slipping which means that point P is
instantaneously at rest. If the angular acceleration about point P is ##\alpha##, the linear acceleration of point O is ##a_O=a_{\text{cm}}=\alpha R.## The linear acceleration of point Q on the rim is ##a_Q=a_{\text{string}}=\alpha (2R).## It follows that ##a_{\text{string}}=2a_{\text{cm}}.##
You say that your answer was not one of the options. I pointed out where you went wrong. Can you post the options?