As others have pointed out, the problem is that the list you've constructed contains the symbol plus, rather than the function plus.
At its heart, this is the same reason that '(a b) returns a list of two symbols, rather than signalling an unbound identifier error; the quote starts a term in a "data language" where legal identifiers are interpreted as symbols, rather than as variable references.
The question, of course, is what you should do about it. Some here have suggested using 'eval'; this is probably a bad idea, for reasons that I think Matthew Flatt captures elegantly in his blog post on the topic.
Instead, you should probably write a simple mapping function. Here's the way I'd write it. If you use my code in an assignment, be sure to credit me :).
#lang racket
;; a mapping from symbols to operators
(define operator-hash
(hash '+ +
'- -
'* *))
;; ... and whatever other operators you want.
;; example of using it:
(hash-ref operator-hash '+) ;; ==> +
'+is not the same as the function+; useevalas explained by Oscar and soulcheck to turn the former into the latter. – Dan Burton Feb 19 at 17:23