Modeling and simulation of turbulent jet noise is an ongoing numerical challenge relevant to noise pollution control. In the present study, the concept of a novel dimensionally reduced modeling approach based on the so-called one-dimensional turbulence model (ODT) is discussed. ODT aims to resolve source terms due to velocity and kinematic pressure variations in the acoustic near-field at all relevant scales, but only for a single physical coordinate. In the standalone formulation of the model, the physical coordinate taken as a notional line of sight that is pointing in radial cross-stream direction and advected downstream with the axial velocity of the jet while the microscales evolve. Thereby, turbulence is represented by a stochastically sampled sequence of discrete mapping events that punctuate the deterministic molecular diffusive advancement. It is discussed how an ensemble of small-scale resolving independent flow realizations can be used to estimate turbulent noise sources from a range of scales. The main objective is to present an approach for the prediction of broadband self-noise generated by a turbulent jet using ODT and Lighthill's equation. Dedicated experimental measurements are conducted for verification and validation of the numerical modeling approach.