1) The school will immediately notify the student's family (see who filled out the emergency notice when he reported to the school).
2) It is impossible to donate money or hold a memorial service. With what? Doing things here in the United States is the order of legal feelings, which is different from the order of rational laws in China. I have attended many funerals in America for so many years, but I have never attended any memorial service at school or work. It seems that except for the large-scale activities of 9 1 1, the collective will not mourn for individuals.
3) I'm afraid the student's body has been sent to the hospital morgue, waiting for the family to claim it and go back to the funeral.
4) It is hard to say whether suicide will be announced. Generally speaking, the local tabloids will report these events first.
If it is a traffic accident, the school generally won't make any official announcement. Basically, the incident has nothing to do with the school.
If it is suicide, the school will decide the way to report it according to many factors. Basically, it is to consider the impact on schools and other students.
A few days before my child went to college, there were a series of suicides, so the school reported them carefully and reminded students repeatedly that there were psychologists in the school who could help them solve their psychological problems. Usually knowing the truth is easier to help other students get rid of the shadows in their hearts faster. The deceased has passed away, and the school is more concerned about how to stabilize the mood of other students.